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Good morning 


WEATHER 

Today: Partly. 

- cloucfy, with Ught 

93.- 

Partly cloucfy this 
evening. Low, S9. 

Page A2 

Magic Vai-ley 



Wrap up: Highlights from the 
-r-Jerome-County-Foir. 

Page B1 

Helping hands: Volunteers 
make life better for animals at 
. Wood River shelter 

PageBl 

SpOR'ES 

Spud racing: Athletes s>vam, 
bik^ and ran through the 
Spudman IViathlon in Burley 
Saturday. 




Cool change: How air condi- 
. . doning ciansfonned Idaho . . 
and the rest of America. 

Page FI 


UPINION 

Numbers game: Stadsdcsthat 

suggesrl^ois’ffpoorplace"" 

for children are misleading, 
todays editorial says. 

, P^e A14 
. .SECTTION BY. SECTION 

Section A Section D 

Weather ... .2 Money — 1-5 
Nation 3,7.9-H .. Idaho/West .6-7 
WXW...M2-13 Movies ....i7 
Opinion .14-15 ’ Classified, .7^0 

Section B ' 


-XF- couple lands 
key posts under 
Kempthome 

By Gregory Hahn 
Thnes-News writer 


TWIN FALLS - Darrel and Joyce McRoberrs 
— havebeenTmo'poUdcs'slnca'iho'daythc'nvomei 
each other at the old Twin Falls Bu^css College 
almost 40 years ago. 

Of course, their involvement started small, 
young members of the Buhl Jaycees who occasion 
ally crossed paths with Idaho’s young, and recchdy 
elected. Democratic senator. 

"We would argue with Frank Church,” Darrel 
McRob 
sdd. 

The muple has Strong ' since then, 

_ ... . , , the two have 

Republican ties now, Otit that been involved 

. wasn'lahmysAecas,. 

I cral ' states 

. -and have spentmuch of tho.past4S years barically 

: ‘TrnnjppmgOTClrothBrtirWtunrpalitics: 

DoitcI McRoberts served in the state 
two terms in the 1980s. His wife succeeded him, 
and became the highest-ranking woman 
serve in the Legislature, when she v 
majority leader. 

I^ter, Joyce McRobcrts was appoin'ted director 
of the Region V office of the Department of 
Health and Welfare. Her husband soon became a 
staffer for then-Sen. Dirk Kempthome and was 
brought to Boise os a key policy advisor when 

- Kempthonie became twvemor. . 

■ Oh Mbndoy,'J6yce McR6bcns“sniru a new job 
as the state’s deputy director of Health and 
• ~Welftt f e , p utt lnrThe~MeR ub c n scsin~ch e ~np p ci — 
echdpn of Kempthorne’s sdll-fresh administra- 
. don, and giving the couple a rare chance to actual- 
ly live and work together in the sbme town. 

The two sat relaxed last week in their Twin Falls 
-home as they talked about their four-decades * 
together and what they expecifiKc next few years 
to bring. The four-bedmm home has been on the 
market since Mor^ The couple hod planned to 
build a new one here, but now that they’re both in 
Boise, Joyce McRoberts said they plan to play it 
byear. 

The couple has strong Republican ties now, but 
that wasn’t always the case. ' 

‘Tm three years older than Joyce,” said ‘Darrel 
— McR0tkIrI^60, “So i wos'abTe' fo" vote for Kennedy 
in I960." 

The young president's message spoke to Darrel 
McRobcns, who wos studying college accounting 

- at tho time, and it wasn't until he developed a 
deep distrust of Lyndon Johnson and watch^ the 

Please see MCROBERTS, Page A2 


Darrel and Joyce McRoberts say they have always enjoyed taking an a,ctlva rolo In politics. Joyce. McRoberts will begin her newest loji Monday 
“is deputydlfectof of Idaho’s department of Health and Welfars: • • " • — “ 








Pulling money out of the air - Chcese companv plans leav e 

sewer bond payments uncertain 


By N.S. Nokkentved / 
T?mes4tewi writer ' 

TWIN FALLS - In Its effort. to 
fight the city .of Jerome’s pro- 
posed annexation, Jerome 
C^ese Co: has threotened to 
remove itself from dty water and 
sewer service. 

It’s unclear where that would 


Administrator Jon Cedi said. 

City and cheese plant offldals 
are negotiating that Issue. The 
plant's contract with the dty for 
sewage treatment expires on 
New Year’s Eve. 

Last week, during a formal 
hearing on a proposed water 
transfer that would give 
Jerome Cheese its own water 
source, general manager Jon 


Obituaries . . .2 
.Maho/West-sS-? 


Vsllsy right sn economic battls evtry ii 


' . Section F 

a:;- '.I 


leave Jerome, which is still pay- source, general manager Jon 
- ing fora sou^e.treannent p^t Davis said.the.water.tnuisfer.had.- 


growth at the cheese plant, City oppodtion to annexation. 

, ' , But a draft complaint meant to 


bo filed in 5th District Court if 
Jerome approves the proposed 
annexation later this month 
dearly connects the two. 

"Joromc Cheese docs not 
reedve fire or police protection 
from the city and is in the 
process of removing itself from 
city water and sewer service. 
Jerome Cheese therefore dues 
not impose any burden on city 
. services that wouldJustify.onncx--. - 


Please soe CHEESE. Page A9 


Spacecraft stirs no visible dust They got away 


''Mi^cniiqdirpi^ ~ 

Fliawm yBlilijtL 


^Classified 

Ugontoj.. 

... for onllM classified adt 

733-0931 

• “orinBuriey ■ 

677-4042 


=WX5HINGTON-^-Lunar- 
Proipector’s'violem collision' 
with the moon; on Saturday left 
no'visible-clbud of-dust.-but' 
researchers still hope to find 
traces of water In a vapor plume 
ytosslbly created by the-lmpact.- — 
At least 20 observatory, tele- 
scopes focused on the moon’s, 
south pole as the spacecraft, in 
- its finu task for science, dove. 
. toward a frozen crater a~nd 
smashed itself around 3:52 ajs, 
__MDT Saturday.: .... 

Experts hoped the fire ond 
violent of the collision, unseen 
from the Earth,*would.vaporize 
ice thought to exist In the shad- 
ed crater and send a wet plume, 
detectable'by' special instru- 
ments, spiraling into the lunor 
•ky... 


~ — Ed win 8. Barker—of— the- 
— Driiversity, of Texas McDonald’ 
— Observatory, -O'leod-reseBrcher- 

- In the project, said telescopes 
. equipped vnth ultraviolet dotec- 
— tors-took-hourscf-datafoUowing: 

- the impact, searching for the ' 
chemical signature of water. .. 

• — “It's-reallytoo early to draw 
any conclusions,” Barker said! 
“So far, we haven’t seen any- 
thing that says water or any- 
. thlngelse.” 

' Final Tesults of the water 
search await analysis of the 
readings by the telescopes in 
' Texas, ' California: 

Massachusetts and Hawaii, and 
, by the Hubble Space Telescope, 

he said. ■ i ; — — 

What researchers are looking 
for is either Water, H20, or the' 
hydroxyl radical. called^OH, 
formed when sunlight splits a. 


T-hvdrogen-etom-oway-from-a- 
■^aftr’nreieCUlbrBonrOH'arid" 
—water have distinctive speerro- 
teopic signatures when ^ewed 
with special telescope filters. ' 

, The sigrioture for water could 
. be found quickly in the data, 
said Barker, but uncovering evl-' 
dence of the hydroxyl radical 
could take weel^ 

The search for .water is more 
. thand scientific ctuiosity..Lorge 
stores of ice on the moon woud 
make it miich easier and chea'[v. 
er to establish a. base there, or 
to use the moon os a way stadoh 
to more dlnont bodies. — 

. Water can be broken down 
chemically into hydrogen and 
-oxygen-that-can-propel-fl-rocket- 
. or .power, generators. Oxygen 
also would provide a breath- 
able atmosphere for lunar 
explorers. - _ 


TlSdurderers_findl^^ officers 


The AisocUted Prwa 

Last'week,''Sh'eriff Roy Wynn’s 
heart broke. He saw carnage in 
Atlanta by a 
man long sus- . 
peered of car- 
nage in his own 
C h e r o k 'e e 
County . in ' 
Alabama.. 

There, six 
years ago, -the - 
man was 
liriked to the 

MaikBarton of a woman 
and her mdth- • 
er. Months of police work in 
Alabama canie to naught. Now, 


_ .Atlanta shootings -A7 - 

the some Mark O. Barton.spla't-' 

- tered blood in Georgia. 

“1 just felt real saddened, all 
these people had lost Uidr lives,”. 
Wynn said from Centre, Ala. “I 
. hoped someday we could bring 
this man to trial.” 

Barton’s case was only the lat- 
est in which it seemed police had 
their hands on a killer only to see 
him slip away to kill again. 

Early this year police ques- 
Titmed~Car y S t ayii e r ill t he~ 
klllirigs of three Yosemlte . 
National Park sightseers. But ' 

Please see MURDERS, Page.A9 


.V 








A2 . Ttme»4lewi, Twin Fain, Idalia Simdjy, Aug.1, 1999 TF ■ 

1 The Region H 

Magic Valley five-day forecast 

91 Yesterday’s weather | 


Camas Pialiie 


HirH: 07 low: SO 
Mostly cloudy In the 
motninj;, lH."CominK |WlIy 
duudy ill lllc ufll'inuun. 
\V>slIy sonny Mond.sy, 



Monday Tliesdoy Wednesday Thursday 




TtBct^ieNAiley 


High: 05 low; 63 
Mostly cloudy, with Itglii 
winds. Mostly sunny on 
NVind.iy w'ilh highs close 


High: 93 low: 59 94' low: 50 ''HyttOOs' Low: SOs ' H%E"90s' Lbw;'"60“ Ht^ 90s' Low: 60s 

P.itily doiA‘ with light Mfxtiysunny. ■rMosifydrar. - • pjftly cloudy with j Mostly clc.ir,' '■ 

winds. ( • ' chjncc of muunt.iin 

showt«. 


-Idaho-weathec. 


Sawtooth Mountains/ 
■ Wood River \toHey 


- High: OS Low: 44 
Mostly sunny iluring the 
morning l>cc<»ming piirlly 




Eastem Idaho 


High: 90 , low; 40 
Mostly sunny liecoming 
|Mrily cloudy during the 
afternoon. Light winds. 
Mostly sunny on Mondiy. 


Nationa l weath er 

I Tho Ac^Woatho(*lorocast lor noon, Sunday. Aug. 1 . 




Twin Falls Precipitation- 

. in Yestcfd.iy in Twin falls 

Yfsifid.iy W 60 . QQ 

‘ .^—Normal niOi to diTlu' — 'iQt— 
W, Iter yc.if to date; -13713 
Norm.ll ye.irtod.ile: 9.25 

Idaho ' • Highs/Lows 

■ M« "Min >cp • 

Hniu- 93 • ' 56 degrees .11 lowell, 

„ 1 „„ ,-7 low. 30 degrees at 

Burley 90 57 — " , 

(■(.•utd'AlrnfH-l , 50 tSUtion: High. 1 18 at 

Cfangcvillc t)7 51 Th er mal. Cal if, tosv. 

II.igernl.in m m in 30 .« Stanley. 


Northern Idaho 


'TC" o 



High: 90 Low: 62 
-LMosllyziunny>.wilh-eail-| 


sunny tin Mondiiy w 
highs in the Itnsff 90s. 


EH3 E3 d] E3 CD EE3 O 


Northern Utah 


For more information 


'J «UI. *Sifc «ai» Tunclolh.-N.rti.n.ilVVejll«efS«vifcr.¥lloUindalVtir-rM162..1w1f.2.5SMIIZ.Tlte 

k#n,nesso, <3M Mm ■>» >s«~. 1 — Irrutnel.iilrins.sfMkLihoTr.impoiuiionOiss.iiinx.'niraHlteita'Tsis; 

...a— hti|>yAvusv.sute.iil.iM/hil5u-tiu(('Sr«lex.himl 


High: 08 low: SS ■|lVJ|Ji;U>J 
Partly doudy with .1 sliglil biMlUttll 
' cKmceuf .iftemoon sliow* Index: Q 
tfs .iftd ihundcrsiorrm. (hi^) 


Across the ivIation 


“ Firecoiidilionsinsoulhcrti, 

m’Bil _ ^ - Itlilioisexifefnoonf.ingc 

Bumlime:'', l.inds.indexlatix'oofoa-sl- 

ISminulcs cd Linds, 


Northern Nevada 


.Hi^;_23_ ^Lowrt .Sunset today _fl;5np.m,_j 

-P«rlly^loudy.wyillt-lighl- ^nrn»4omamiw-(^34-a.m.^ : — 

winds. Mostly sunny «>n Lurur ph^ L.isi quarter; Aug. 4; new. Aug” 
Mondiy. 1 1; first ()u.incf. Aitg, 19; full, Aug. 26, 


. Idaho: Sunny shies (Mv.iihtl across most o^.thu . 
Com st.vc Satutdiy afternoon, although satellite 
pictures indic.uc<i some clouds over the PanKindhr 
,ind over the Ncv.hLi and Utah borders. 

Scattered sltowvrs artd thundnstorms woe also 
I nuied akmg the squiltem lioriier. 

'' Afternoon tompcr.itiircs lirerc generally in ilic 
_ BOsJThc waon spot was at Mountain Homosvilh a_ 

xvM at Mullin iuss \vl»w at 2 pm the teo^x.-ra- 
lure clinilKd to f>0 dn'tvi.'S. 

Elsewhere: Slightly cooler weather began to 


.indsiorms to several states. But heal and humidity 
continued to be a problem for much of the enun- 
try. 

Deadly high temperatures and humidity conlin- 
ucd its reign over much of the country, with the 
n.vion's death toll over 14D, RectJitk fell in North 
.Cifolina^outh Carolina.. aod.West-Vitgima.ai_ 


Burley 90 57 

(■(.•ui d'Ali-ni- H4 . 50 
CfanRcvillc 07 51 

Idaho Falls 85 m 

l.isvisltin 91 57 

'Malad m m " 

Malta '«> rti — 

- -McCall BO 38- _ 

i’ocaiello 09 51 

Salmon U4 ' 45 

-St.inley 77 30. 

Sun Valley m. m 

The-Nation 


Chicago 

0.t(l.i$ 

' Drt Moines " . 

■ Detroit 
Honolulu 
Houston 
Indi.in.Tixiliv 

Kansas City 

-Tas’Y'cg.is 

Let Armies 

Mlarrii Beach 

Minneapolis 
New Orli-.ins 
New York 
Oklalionia City 
Omaha 
I’hna-nis 
Pittsburgh 
i■otll.^nI^Ml^ 

Portbnd, Ore. 

SI. Louis 
S.lll KlkeCily 
San Francisco 
Ik-.iltlL- 
Spokane 
Vv.isliingtnn 

Yuma 

Canadian Cities 

C.ilg.ity 

Montreal 


.Nrxin iKxnldily; 24S 

“Nctantsromnrir3003 

IVdk-ntoonl: 13.iml- 
erale. kiKlUa, nntles. 
grass. 

Mold: 6.785, high. . 


McRoberts ' 

Continued from A1 , 

rise of 'fcilow Westerner Barry The McRo 

— Geidvrater t h nt-hrrsearted foHoiv> v ■ . r . ~rr : 

ing the Republican Party. •• f Ith Joyce Mefioberta rocer 

• And.in-UuMWfly-lOtaOfi^rrol 

McRoberts said, his wife would ' * ■ 

vote more for Uie condidatu tlion . 

for (lie party tho Twin Fells eeuplo's already eip 

:istiidoSsheinterje«cd. •*” 

It’s an independence she ha.s 
-tlung .lo..and.Umu;]icy-botlj 
demonstrotod.in the 10 years * 

when there wns a McRoberts in Important Issues facing • 

“W hod several votes like yPuMoedueattau Joyce McRoberts 

that.” said Darrel McRoberts, - sits on tho state's Exiting Standords 
“where McRoberw was the only Commission, which Is developing . 
Republican to vote one way.” mQuirements end mlnlmura 

But the couple has been con- eeadetfilc standards for tho stoto's 

sistentl ybehin d the COP for * 

— {Jocade.'?7T;ctTlTTB'lTivolved“ln " “ -i' Agrweture: c's'iei McRoboiteJe— 
elections from President Nixon's Gov.DIfkKempthome'skoyagotM- 
day to former Idnho Coy. Phil sot. He’wrks with the Oepartment o 
Bntt’s. Agrfwhiira arid Is a vlsIMe prince 

And Joyce McRobcrls’ local I ni . 

involvement with Steve Symms' psked Darrel McRoberts to b< 
victory over Church planted the the senator's southern idahe 
two firmly in' the Idaho field representative, but a tern 


' ■ ' ■ - — — '■> much-decried Deportment of all the-time, ond she became a tions and drive to do for Health 

Thd McRobertSes’'a£6nda Health and welfare. much better senator than I and Welfare statewide what she 

..... 11 ,- : ^ ~ ' **g h<- knfw rbf <yxt t»m rim l wn< .*‘ did for the de par tment in t h e 

W ith Joyce McRoberts' roeont many leglslstNe commlReo meetings. how it worked,** said Sen. Her success made her a poten- Magic Valley. She's also on the . 

Booointm en t tolhe qumb er _ K’.Utgi BvertedtoofUam:O afret_ Dcnioa.J}accu)gtoivJliDedo..3 . tiaX.X3ndidatcJo£-Ucutcnaal statc.commission preparing exit- 

two 'spot In the state McRoberts sits on' a task fon» work-' member of the Senate Health governor in the mid-1990.s, and ing standards for public schools. I 

Defwrtment of Health and Welfare, .jn gwtth'cowtylflademtoOe^how and -Welfare Committee. “She she mode it dear - MoanwhHe, | 

ihoTwIh ftll8'«uplo'8 Slr'8ady exparv , 'I'S&’ifdeei'vftihllAeotS knew the people, the players." then that she ' her h'lisband is | 

she sbhere of Influence grew even^ . animal foeding operat/one. • . l4>nding the regional director had higher nspi- helping the gov* 

-larger;* -— •• I .' ""T: — Tv'WaWSbmKJtSbe'McRob^ “j*ob"af nic'hcighi of welfare — raiians .,J 0imaim.ljq3LS0nQJ.a - ernor navigate — 

rcfoTO, Jovcc MdLoberts guidcd But It was in holM'tOflie. If's NOf (/ /ife.- ' one of the v^t 

McRoberts wfekfcl^ on eome el V ^ , ofiStnrough the croStlon and Impte- live local ujcncy office through a ' the Senote-tbat' . .... " farm ’crlses'ln' 

the most Iniponani Issues facing ■ • mentaponofwehaw reform. As tough time of criticism ond Joyce Aly/ijeismyji^tiHfWUlsaNa.dccidet and 

. .. ^ : (teputy<Jlrsrior.*8he:iiwofkwlththe • changes, while adding a new , McRoberts real- serving as 

✓ PubOo eeucatwn: Joyce McRoberts loj^laturs on future questlotis^incl credibility to the department. ly started learn- ' ‘J J • Kempthorne’s 

sits on the state's Exiting Standords act es tho departipem's liaison wM When former colleague Joyce ing about Health eyes and cars on 

Commission, which Is developing , rt^drul offleos. ' McRoberts told legislators how and Welfare, ,,, ,v , such issues as 

testing requirements end minimum V Poblte lende: Derrel McRobeiU is .dedicated the department's She impressed — UurTCl MCKODCns the use of state 

eeadetfilc standards for tho stoto's Knnntluvnit'timivimnrnitvninthA . workers were, they Sieved her. her fellow sena- lands ‘and the 

SirallTOirtiimo^ nicmysiiquc was gone. . lors with her ^ . state’s Volicy on 

A ^tctd tuw : O atTBl M cR obe it aJs W b j I ' o MiHiLh. ut tei tis iH i iy g' j Bi 'J ' rrpeople-fclt-o-lot-beiier-oboui attention to ; — giant-livestock — 


• offlco Vtfough the croatlon and Impte- 
mentapon of watfare reform. As 
doputydlraPtor,*8he;iiworkwlththe ■ 
Let^latureon future quesUoru^ind 
act es,tho department's liaison wjth 
ro^orul officos. 

V PebM lande: Darrel li^obeiU is 
Kempthome's representaUve to the - 
' S^ De par tmo n t of Lands. He does 


But it was in hohhlo iUe. Ifsnofa/i/e.- one of the v^t 
the Senotethat' ,, . .... " farm crl8es~in 

Joyce Aly life IS m\ffYwm’i/ls miff Aectitltis and 


Gov. OIrk Kempthome's key eg advi- 
sor. Ho'wjrka with the OeporUnenl of 
Agrfwhura'and Is a vlsIMe prince o( 


McRoberts real- 
ly started learn- 
ing about Health 
and Welfare, 
She impressed 
her fellow sena- 
tors with her 
—ol tent ion to— 


- Darrel McRobcns 


asked Darrel McRoberts to be 
the senator's southern Idaho 
field representative, but a tern- 


the door for opportunities the Giant's Shelley spuii plant kept 
both have enjoyed .since. Darrel McRoberts from being 

able to sav vcs. But Kcmplhomc 
KempUfomV was the mayor ol kept the jbirbpen until 'SreFcli 

Boise when lie first met Darrel 1995, 

McRoberts He want- 

in the mid- • , , — ^ ed to take 

1980-s, but JtsjinwyjMrmisesamctum'saaa^'iU skills 


llo "gor""lo saymim'sfollmimsilmK-.-IfU- 

know the Xil'asn'lfortuvyou liVIlM/l 'th’theiv. ' learned in 


35 years of 
corporate 
manage- 


stoff, meetings and prepores tho gov- 
ernor for the.ded^ons tho five eiect- 
ed offl^ need to moke. 

the Statcbousc this winter, 
(hough his group of well-paid 
policy advisors and his .iggrcs- 

and quite a few hackles during 
. the legislative session. 

“Whiit I lik e to do is surroun d 
my.scli wiilt (bat kind ol pracii- 
cal and pragmatic experience,’* 
Kcmpihamc said. 

"Dirk never tells us how to do 
.somcdiing,” Darrel AIcRobens 
explained. “He tells us to work 
with The agencies, to find a win- 
win situation." 

And ilic state’s other officials 
arc beginning to accept 
Kcmpihornc’s reorganization, in 


it," Ncivcomb said. detail and -determination to 

' Joyce McRobcns credits' some know and understand every- 
of the image building to Satt, thing in from of her committees, 
who let the local offices open up “She’s a real cariy-bird riser,”, 
to the press ond community Dorrington said. “She was one 
much more than his predecessor .of the first ones in the 
Cecil Andrus. Others cite her Statchousc always. She was u 
~ Icadcrship.'They saw Ir at work — hard worker; took a lor of pro- 
in the bciiaie. \ jeets anu^w iheni tlirougli." 

"She was firm," Dorrington T}icy didn’t always make it all 
said. “When she says this is it, the way. 

— you-might-BS-weil-bank-on-itT Aftcr-chairing-u-lcg' ’ '' 

because that’s the way it’s going - committee on health c 
to be.” five years and working 

Her lime in tbc Senate leader- years on a bill that wot 
ship was "one of - changed ' 

the higlilighis of n Idaho h 


A •• serving -as 

Kempthorne’s 
eyes and cars on 
, such issues as 

2Kobcns the use of state 
lands ‘and the 
. state’s ■policy on 
giant-livestock — 

operations. 

Darrel, McRobcns is earning 
SSS.OOO in tbc governor’s ofncc. 

A Health and .Welfare 
spokesman did not give Joyce 
McRoberts’ salary, despite sev- 
eral inquiries by The Times- 
News. Her regional dircaorship- 

slarlcd at 5^7,000 fl y®ff: 

Though the two have had 
plenty of differences over the 


•Aftcr-chairing-u-lcgtslbtive 38 years - he informed her he 


committee on health care for 
five years and working for two 
years on a bill that would have 
changed the way 
=^===* Idaho handled 


merit, and' part because DarrcLMcRo^ris 


future gov- rv!U e,m ih,i eimm ycors of • ^od ilic statc’s Other officials 

ernor, he lillt fill'll lUOW l/H S(Wte corporate arc beginning to accept 

hnfi -llL'illv ihitIzalHillthim. ' m a ,n o g e - Kempthome’s reorganization, in 

had already “fd part because DarrcL McRobcns 

made a con- -Wallv McKobcrcs on hl.S use them m and-ihe other "cabinet" mem- 

, ,»rc:nLs,I>..m.H:.nd Joyce 

theircurrent McRobcitS controver- nor and the Legislature to work 

rolwiivMiite sial envi- welltogcthcr. 


h Symms’ right-hand man and natural resource discussions 
Fhil Rebcrger, Kempthome’s • taking place in Idaho and 

chief ofstaff. '/ • Washington, D.C. ' NewComb, R-Burley. 

- Morc-ilian a decade later, less. .-~i!iY6ii sliouiaHie able to resolve 
.than two weeks after corporate ^l^ese issues for us," Darrel As Darrel McRoberts helped 
rcsmuciuring.led_.io_Darrel__.McRoberts . .-remembers . ease the transition of a new gov- 
McRo^rts retirement from the Kempthome telling him. emor, Joyce McRobcns worked 


— Wully McRobcns on llLs use them in and-ihc other "cabinet" mcm- 
tvm-nr< I'Vim-1 -inrllnv^f* his dcoUngs “bers ore M well-rd'spcactl. Next = 
p.lFcnLs, I Atrru ,ina JONCC with the winter, most expect the gover- 
McRobcns controver- {}ig Legislature to work 

^ _ sial envi- welltogcthcr. 

- ' ' : rnnjnonfnl • i r 


hard in that election. ' 


mcr really started after the 

sion,” said Mouse Speaker Bruce 
NewComb, R-Burlcy. 

As Darrel McRobcns helped 


. 1 * - ^ " - ^ And-KompihorncaookJiiS-_ to-imprav'e jlLe_ij6tjliitioii5lup ^t-Hrwt^^w'r-Hn-KnriT^iTr. - 

Th™ fcsulls or.cnled pKifosophy lo' benveen tne I«slslalurc anailit- 


^’McRobcm’ 

oldest son WaUy, lltml in lliateltxthn.' ' suffered 'a tough 

a manager- at defeat at the 

Pisces hands of the 

Investment Inc. _ Invr,- MnRnbvTre r»n health-industry 
inffogenuon. -Jqyo. MCKOCX-fC. on ,„|,bjtsts uhe 

While. Darrel - -bcingosked ifshc Were thought she had- 
Me'Roberts ... , , , ,, Vvorke’d with so , 

would get fnis- . nding hcF husband s well. 

(rated .by the , . Ovn . _“I.thought,the 

bickering. and COarailS income Senate. J,ni was a-go 


party-HHU puil- — ====»= — s ne-sator-^-mtt— 

tics, Joyce was really quite a 

McRobens-tMved on the inter-' shock. But yoii get over those 
play and adrenaline. By the end . things.” ' ’ , 

of Darrel McRoberts* second . 

term, changes at Qrcch'Grant And'fivc years later, she arid 
demanded his attentio n, ond her husband have more pressing 
held his intcresf*. issues. ■ ■ 


would marry her on their sec- 
ond date; she didn't particularly 
likcTiim at the time - they’re 
taking their largely similar 
agendas to the top of Idaho gov- 
■ emment. 

And the biggest question sur- 
rounding their future is their 
boss, the governor, Darrel 
McRobcns said. 

“He’s a very ambitious per- 
son,” he said. "Right now, be 
loves being governor. But be. 
surprised a lot of people when 
he left the Senate.” 

The .couplc’s.Jioc looking-, 
beyond the -next few years.-At 


-least n gn t n ow ; : — 

“Wc’ll probably look to rcdfc 
at the cnd-of-the tenn;“-Joycc- - 
McRoberts said. "But I can^t 
imagine not working.” • 

~ T fnicf-/ V< ws sta f f wriu r. GiygotV ' 
Tfalin can be /cached at 733-t)93J, 


Kempthome came to town. They. 


Gireulariori. 

Ounlct Walock, circulation manaitcr 

Circulation phone lines are open 
between 7 nnd >0 ii.m. only. !f you 
do not receive ytnir pu|>or-liy-7-u.m.r 
call tho number for your ureni 
Burlcy-Ruperf- 

Paul-Oakley 6774042 

Twin Fulls 

and other areas -...733-0931 


said. "Joyce was sitting in for me" •: McRoberts-to usp her connee- • shahn^imasievaUeyxom 


Subscription races 


Sunday S7.00 per wcclT. daily only S3.00 
per week, .Sunday only S3.30 per week. 
•Salcy tax Included in all above raiet, A 
-SIS. 00 chariic will ho lovied-for all 
fciumcdchcwLv . ... _ 

'Mailinformacion 

Tlw TiiiKw.'Scw* (UPS 631-OHO) Uputr 
IlilieJ dally at 132 Third Sl. W.T Twin 
Halla; Idaho, K3301. by Magic Valley 
Newvpapcri Inc. Periodica paid at Twin 
Fallc hy.The TImet-Newt. OrBclal city aixt 
county new tpaper punuuu lo.Scciion 6C- 
108 of the Idalio C^. Thuiiday Ja hereby 
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legal iioiicci will be putilliHai, 

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■ Nation 


G0P sets 


■ House, Senate must 
work out differences; 
Clinton says he’ll veto- 


Republicans are laboring under a 
tight sulf'imposed deadline to 
: s<^pt a 579 2 hiI Iion.tax.cutcoiiL_^ 
promise that can clear the House 
— and Scnuie-by wtsfk’s end and set — 
the stage for a fall veto sliowdown 
with tlic White House. 

■ Hou.se Speaker Dennis Hasten, 
R-Ill., and Senate Majority 
Lender Trent Lott, R-Miw., gave 

— follow-Ropublicans-only-until 

Tuesday to resolve differences - 
between bills passed by the • 
House and the Senate. 

With the hurry-up compromise 
effon scarcely under way, Lott 
criticized President Clinton for 
_opposing_thc measure. “,We, j 

'should reduce taxes, with the I 

largest middle-class tax cut since I 

Ronald Reagan was president.” | 

Lott said in Saturday's weekly 

-^GOP-radiojiddr css.^ - 

“Ycs,_wc-shouia trust' the 
American people to wisely spend, 
or save, their earnings. And of 
course, tve aren’t going to imperil 
Medicare, or Social Security, or | 

any other cs.scntinl federal pro- 
gram in the proccs.'tf' * 

Republican aides, who spoke 
on condition of anonymity, said 
tlic hope of the Icndc^pp is that 
rank-and-file lawmakers trill use ' 

a month-long August break to ■ 

trumpet the virtues of tax cuts to ' 

their constituents. ' 

I 


The differences 


pas^bythe.Kouse'and.the I 



StruirKay Ball^ Huichinson, R-Tezaa, and PeiybbaiatUcI, R-frMrrpt<>*nt i»cl(»gcyri4ay1a~ 

Washington, D.C. The plan Includes clear Ideological dlfferencos with the plan put temard by ^ Clinton admlnlstnUsn. 

The legislation will not go to national dcl». the planned Augitsi break lo for- 

the While House until after' Tliere arc numerous other dlf- tify the pan>- for the veto smagple 
Labor Day, though, to deny fcrcnces between the two bills, that lies aheacL 
Clintotvthc opportunity for a including, for example, compel- Most Democrats opposed the 
widely publicized veto ceremony ing pro{xisats for reducing capital Senate bill, as was the casein the 

when Congress is not in session. gains taxes and varying lists of House, and Clinton sharply 

Given the compressed provisions insened at the behest attacked the measure shonly 

timctablc that' Republicans have of individual lawmakers. after the Senate appnn-tri it. 

set for themselves, it will fall to Witli narrow voting margins in **The Republican tax cut is so 
Hasten and Lott to prod key law- both the House and Senate. large it woult| undo our fiscal dis- 

makers to dose the deal. The Republican leaders will have lit- dpHne and imperil p rosperi- 

major decision will be to rccon- tic margin for error as they pro- ty,” he said in a written state- 

the bills’ provisions for broad- duce a compromise. But ilie price ment. **lt would crowd put our 

based ttix relief. of failure will be high. commitments to pny-down the -’ 


;incoffletax«8 

' "lHuta hfc AgD»thfrboart 10 paieant 
cut In lecone tax mtes. phoMd In cmt 
10 yews. Annual IncttflmnU would ... 
Mek In only II Uw pwewmcnfi cost of : 
banporing to pay the national debt 

^ »laaata bOk BeUuea boHom IS pan^. : 

; ’rahwtMln«mlai«iforthatMkkaito 
'S47Ak) lor maoM cDuptasond 

' [^7,760 Ibrtinglapaopla. 



10-pcrccnt across thc-bbard cut, 
phased in gradually. The Senate 
hill cuts ihd current 15 percent 
tax bracket io 14 percent in 2001. 
Beginning in 2006, it gradually 
shifts some income into the lower 
bracket. 

Most conservatives favor the 
across-the-board approach, and 
Lott was supportive when other 
Republicans sought unsuccc$.sful- 
-iy-io-inscfi it-inio tlio^caatc-bill 

But the across-the-board ' 
approach made it through the-. 
Hoasc only after Hasten and the 
Icadcrsliip agcccd.to condition 
the tax-rate decline on annual 
roducrions.in.intcfsy.dtiej»n.ihc.„ 


national dcl». 

Tliere arc numerous other dif- 
ferences between the two bills, 
including, for example, compet- 
ing pro{)osats for reducing capital 
gains taxes and varying lists of 
provisions insened at the behest 
of individual lawmakers. 

Witli narrow voting margins in 
both the House and Senate. 
Republican leaders will have lit- 
tle margin for error as they pro- 
duce a compmmisc. But ilie price 
of failure will be high. 


10-pcrccnt across-the-board cut, 'on condition of anonymity; said to strengthen and modernize 
phased in gradually. The Senate the GOI* hopes to build public Medicare with a long-overdue 

hill cuts ihd current 15 percent support for the'measure during prescription drug h^efiL” 


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" ' ... . . . .,. 

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Boneless, 
Skinless 
Frver Breasts 

^ .p^per-Value-PaG k- -- - 

Limit 2 Please 






FBI considered him a 
mass murderer after 
analysis of earlier case 


A TLANTA - N eichbors who 

watched him from afar say he 
seemed sweet, a real Southern 
gentleman. Lawyers who worked 
— closelywlth-hliirforyear5"call~ 
him brilliant^ But the FBI appar* 
ently lookedMark-Orrin Barton — 
up and down-five years ago and 
came to one prophetic cogclu* 
sion: mass murderer. 

At the time, Barton was a sus- 
pect In the meat-dcaver murders ' - 
-^of-his-wife-and-mothcr-in-law: — 
Scratching for evidence, police 
asked the FBI to consider every- 
thing they knew of Barton and 
render an opinion, according- to 
Michael Hauptman, the Atlanta ' 
lawyer who represented Barton 

atthedmiu 

"He fit the profile of a mass 
murderer,” Hauptman said 
Friday. Td say whoever wrote 
the profilc'should get a pay 
raise." ' 

3th FBI spoKCsman wouiun’t 
. comment on what profiling iho j 
bureau may have done of Bmon. | 
Until they do, or until someone 
who knew Barton well comes for- 
ward, the pudgy investor who ' 
killed liinc people Thursday in as . i 
mariy minutes 7 after bludgeon- \ 
ing to death his \vifc and two chil- i 

dren - will have eluded true cap- 
ture. f 

Though he shot himself six t 
hours after committing the blood- 1 

lest murder in Atlanta’s modem < 



deeply hurt by the actions of my 
son, Mark, 1 loved him very 

much:'* 

- A fri'pnd of Gladys Burton, 
Zclma Hutchinson, said Barton 
had lost a lot of money recently, 
and that he’d called his mother 
the day before his rampage, 

nwfiil T h o /-fin t- f-ryp . 

tion “kind of upset" Barton’s 
mother, Hutchinson said. , 

Other than his motlier, howev- 

Of. fuw pum; tG~sT c ppcd~forward~: 

to speak up for, or explain, the 
44-yefir-old fomier chemist, who- 
graduated from the University 
of South Carolina with a chem- 
istry degree but without having 
left much of on impression on 
anyone in the chemistry depart- 

mentt— tTho*-gradun ted— from— 

Sumter High in 1979 without 
leaving a faint mark on even the 
yearbook, in which his name’is 
wrong not once, but twice. 

' Along with the suicide note. 


from birthdays to pilgrimages' 


This undated family pheiogtaph ihowa liark and UIgh Ann Barton and th«h 
daughter, Myehella, and ion, Matthew. The children ware 8 and H reepecUvely 
when ha bludgeoned them end Leigh Ann to death lait weak In their suburban 
Atlanta home. 


Along with the suicide note. 
Barton left sepamte notes on the 

bodies.of.his children, each one - 

a sad, little deluded lament and 
request. 

“1 give you Matthew David 
Barton. My son, my buddie (sic), 
my life. Pleasb take care of him." 

'“1 give you MycheUtrEUrabeth 

-^-.Borton. My daug)iier,-my sweet*- 
- bcort.mylife.’’ 

A similar note was found with 
Lci^ Anp, whose body Barton 
stuffed in a closet. 


ATLANTA (.fP) - Dean 
Dclttwalla’s daughter Sluihtila 
turned 4 on Tlmrsday, but lie wa.s 
saving the big basli for Sumlny - a 
trip with her school .friends to 
. Chuck & Cheese. 

— :r^ie-way-it-Ii)t)ks.-liitiTfuneriiiTT 
may be Sunday,” said Dclau-alla’s 
brother Fred. 

Dean Delawalla, 52, who had 
given up his law prachcc last year 
to focus on o|itions trading, was 
“gurineydowtnn his broker's 
office Tlmrsday. 

Eiglit otlier people were killed 
■ in Mark O. Barton’.s rampage at 
two Atlanta brokerages, and 13 
were in j ured. 

Another victim was Texas 
native Kevin Dial, 36, office man- 
ager at Momentum Securities, 
where the shooting started. Dial 
was the son of former Pituburgli 
Stcclcrs and Dallas Cowboys wide 
reaver Buddy Di^. “I never saw 
the guy witHo'ut'a'smile on his 
face - never, not once," said Eric 
Blaicr, who works down the hall 
with Allegiance Telecom. 
“Probably one of the happiest 
guys I ever saw.1! 


Like Delawalla, other victims 
- iwe in the offices to day trade on 
the stock market. One of them 
was Edward Quinn, 58. 

Tile father of tliree tras only a 
couple of years into his retire- 

-ment-uftgr degad M Twitbr tjni t eit ' 

Parcel Service, where he last 
served as Southeast regional . 
director for security .and loss pre- 
vention. Friends and neighbors 
said Quinn seemed to hftre tfiree 
passions besides his family - his 
latsTi, flyfisliing and golf. 

"Wien lie retired, his plim v«is 
to begin traveling the world ;md 
placing at all the great old coiirv 
c s across th e p lanet." said Ken 
Slernad, a UPS spokesman who 
had known Quinn for 10 years. 

“Tliat was his goal.” 

Charles Allen Tenenbaum. 48, 
w-as another of die day traders. 

Tenenbaum jogged several - 
miles a day, was president of his 
synagogue and ran his family's 
grocery business. Great Savings. 

His synagogue’s rabbi, S. 
Robert Ichay. said Tenenbaum 
planning his first pilgrimage 
to Isra el tlp»t y-ear . 


history, many here say part of 
Barton will remain “at large" 


_until_sqmc_motive for. hls_mod-.._ 

— ness can-bfrfound. 

.He left plenty of dues, enough 
clues for investigators to sift 
- through forever, indu'dlng swings 
in his stock market portfolio, a 
wife who may have grown weary 
of him and an ongoing murder 
investigation that apparently 
weighco heavily on his psyche. 

He was said to be deeply 
depressed, a nerd used to com- 


for his rampage, didn’t answer 
the question haunting the fami- 
lies now planning funerals, the 
question jawing at the 13 peo- 
ple he injured, including a 38- 
year-otd woman left blind by a 

bullet to the head. 

— r^Why-^-I?^Banoh-mus^-io— 
himself in the note. “1 have been 
d^g since October. I wake up at 
night so afraid, so terrifie'd that I 
couldn’t be thot afraid while 
awake. It has taken its toll. I 
have come to hate this life and 
this system of things. I have 
come to have no hope.” 

What terrified him, why he 
hated “this system," why 


bed: Matthew, 11 and h^chelle, 
8, both bundled in towels and 
blankets, favorite toys by their 
sides, skulls caved in. 

“1 forced myself to do It to 
keep them from suffering so . 
..much.later^^o-mother, no- 


ilAuofpMnelhcmorkct.In bother lo explain, ond police Mid ns this .. Even though I nm $250,000 In hqmi 


the father arc ernnsfened to the 
son. It was from my father to me 
and from me to my son." 

Barton's father, Truman, died 
two years ago. His mother. 77- 
year-old Gladys, wosn’t answer- 
ing her phone Friday in Sumter, 
S.C. where Banon grew up. She 
sent out a four-paragraph siate- 
ment, pan of which read: “There 


' "1 killed her on Tuesday 

ni^t," Barton wrote in the sui- 
cide note. “1 killed Leigh Ann 
' because she was one' of the main 
reosons'for my demise." 

The children, he wrote, he 
killed Wedne«iay. 

The suicide note was dated 
6:38 a.m., July 29, eight hours 
before Barton began randomly 
- firing his Colt . 45 handgun and - 
GIdric 9 iqm around the otiices ol - 
Momentum Securities, Inc., the 
brokerage firm where he’d been 
'a day trader, and where he’d 
recently suffered severe revers- 


Thursday, 
August 12 


Tuiln Foils City Porit 
B« 9 lnnlA 9 ot 5:30 m 
Picnic TIctwts • $10 Adults 
$7Childr«n12aOlder 


Dinner • Live n Silent Ructions < 


Old Oo lUi llvn Auctioft POchofltA. Diomond & 14h. 

from Fox Plorol, $35'glFt certlflcote from Creekside 
Restouront and on overnight sbov ot the Shllo Inn. 


hit paf xnnfll .-ftm ptufr pr/ik filA ho • tho v had n’t vct dls covc red if 

. listed his sole hobby as doy to Bonon suffered from some pfiysi- 

day stock trading, and his motto col or mental illness dating back 

was: “A dollar earned is a dollar to last fall. . 

— saved • — - — -BanorJ left his-suicide-note-in— 

Rec'cntlyi he’d oarned hun- the aportment he shared with' 

■ dfcd.4 o f thoiLsnnils of dQiinra the - Leigh Ann , his second \rifc,jind 

hard woy, by coUcedng an insur- Ids' two'^ldrch'by his firsj wife, 

ance pretnium on* the wife he Barton wrote in his note thot 
was suspected of slaying. Leigh Ann and the children suf- . 

But even in his carehilly writ- fered 'iicile poin ... I hit them 

ten flawlessly typed sulddc note, with a hammer in their sleep and 


According to one Momentum 
source, Barton lost as much as 
$105,000 this summer, though 
the company also released a 
sta tement F riday saring he was 
still worth $75O,T500rincludm^ 
$250,000'in liquid ossets. 



cV no Oovtacr c/foTwiOTii 


hard way, by collecting an insur- 
ance prcfflium on* the wife he 
was suspected of slaying. 

But even in his carefully writ- 


with a hammer in their deep and 
printed on personal stationery then put them face down in a 
and encased in a plostie sleeve, : - bathtub to make sure they did 


and released by police Friday, 
-Barton ;didn’rTcvcalthe T c ason s- 


notwiikoupinpain." 

- Then he-laid the-children-in- 


rumor 


,even 
uid mean 

M 



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Suidiy. Ai«mt 1 1999 . T*ta ,A9 


Murders 


the; disnissed the 37>y^-oId 
tnotel handj i.tan as a suspect — 

, imtO he ronfened to the Joly 21 

• .fa rfw a diTig ^of a paik namralist. • 

:r ^eJaia etafessed to aD 

• . ; While the FBI and Houston 

• )mlice hunted Angel Maturioo 
Reseadgforag iin^« rfim«yW^^ 
unwitting unmigration agents 
n a b be d for QkgaDr 

the cTwintiy. and <^nt him b^dc 

~ 'toMBdcd ■ ■ ■ 1 

, Anolher spectacular aurder 
case. htrm. 

der. AQ to a Baas' of wecis. Or 
wse tfaer Uonders at an? 

- : - The piddic is gefXiog a lunri^ 
tog look at the daOT* Irasnaiiaa 
of mek. eip e m say. 

general public knows,* says 
Vernon Ce b yth . fumaj head 
Bruux hnmickle in tlw Sew York 
Police o^artiaent. Nowa coo- 
mli ^iit, Otleith prasecn- 

_ tears are Bate rdacxaoc toda y to 

tdae dd cases'tlm ares^ a sore 


Cheese 


*Tbere are a lot of people who 
ontnmi t inurds who are walldng 
the street" because, he says, 
prosecutors “don't believe 
they’re able to qt<ram ^ beyond* 
thc'Teasonable'doubt scenario." 

reverse is also true. Every 
day in this country, people are 
falsely accused. "We have three 

from death row b ecause they 
were wrongfully convicted," says 
_lL^y^^es»:a formcT-offiw, 

Department at California State 
University at San Bernardino. 
"Criminal investigation is not a 
prec« science." 

Fairness built iuo the U.S. 
CbnsdiutioQ ^ays inng part. 

"Retrospectively, it’s easy to 
say we sfa otdd~ ha ve~daBgThiCwe — 
should have done that," says 
Professor James F^e, a former 
Sew York Qty lieutenant 
who teaches at Temple 
University in Philadelphia. 
Rnles of evidexice may firustxate 
cops, be says, "because the 
Constitution, very ' fairly. 


requires a whole set of safe- 
guards on Che criminal justice 
process." 

And n-en in good police work, 
a lot can go wrong. 

There is plain bad luck. 
There's also a bi of crime. A lot 
of high tech, nor enough commu. 
nication. More stranger-on- 
— stranger imtrder.-Turh — — 

Like cs-eryone else, police use 
computers and the Internet to 
..aid their work. But explains:. 
..inctor..Kappelcr,-who-tcaches-~ 
police studies at Eastern 
'Kentucky 'University in 
Richmond, “the communication 
between law enforcement agen- 
cies is still very, very poor. It 
goes back, historically, to turf 
and jurisdiction and icrritorialt- 
tyT' 

The resolution of three tragic 
cues in July draws lots of atten- 
tion to these problems. 
Together, they look like a trend. 
But they’re not. Some murderers 
get away, and not only serial 
IdUm. 

' Co n sid er Cyrano hlarks. Two 


w-eeks ago< in Atlanta, Mark.s 
killed his (urlfricnd, her sister 
and four children before turning 
the gun on himself. As it turns 
out, a decade ago' Marks faced 
charges for murdering an airline 
cmplojx-c. A judge threw out the 
case for insuffio'ent cridcncc. 

Consider Richard Allen Davis.* 
In 1993. sOOiniftcr uavu abduct- 
cd young Polly Klass from her 
home in Petaluma, Calif., his car 
- got stuck in a dheh. Two Sonoma ■ 
— Counpf sh e ri f f s dep u ricsrinTcr- — 
ligating a trespassing.report, — 
found Davis stranded on a pri- 
rate road. They helped free him, 
checked for outstanding war* 
rams, and sent him on his way. 
They didn't know about the kid- 

nanmni» 2fl fho infnr. 

mation was not broadcast on 
their radio channel. 

Davis, now on death row, later 
told police that when the 
deputies found him, that Polly 
was titling on a hillside, alive. 
He said he idZbd her later. 

Every , case.presents unique 
problems for investigators. 


- ' Nahox 

Ten-die when plane crashes 


COTTRELLVILLE TOUN- 
SHIP, Mich. (API - A plane carry.-. 

• ing nine members of a skydix-ing 
' group that was holding its annual 
campoui crashed shortly after 
takeoff Saturday, killing all the 
passengers and the pilot, authori- 
ties said. - 

king Air 200, came doxjn less 
than a mile from Marine City 
Airport at.8:20 am. in this iown« 
i.ship.abaut.40.milcs north of-- 
Detroit, said State Po]i(a‘_Sgt. 
Q^'gNyehoIt; 

The cause wasn't knowti. 

The pilot of'the plane, Paul 
Myks, xvas a Spirit Airlines pilot 
who flew DC-9’s fpr the airline, 
said Gar y Coo per, regional direc- 
tor ot the UTS.Tarachuting 


The {dant is a sigsificanz seg* 
mezu of the city's sew a ge treat- 
manload. 

Evpsxtioa at Jeraae CTxese B 
1996 led the oty to its 

waste water jq 


Mon o paymoBs Cor the etpoBsiao 
extend throat 2006 . Ceol sx^ 
, The fate erf the hood p^aests 
rmnaiat to r w w raf xt 


Waste tmer tTcatmeiit costs 

le dnr afaoal Sman anmnllv 


depending on t^ plant's dts* 
diai^ Ced said. 

In its efforts to gatti *q inde- 
pendent waier socrce. the cm- 
nanv has faonehr twn wwn- n«fm 


pany has txxtgfa two wxer rights 
and has appiU to txansfff dxBe 

rights to a well on cas^Boy prop- 

«ny* 

In a petition to inierrene in 
protests of those transfers, the 
— dtyJias e x presse d ooo ceiB abonc 
bow that dxxoge woodd afiea tie 


city’s other water customers. 

The cheese plant is the city’s 
only industrial water user. The' 
plant’s water btD is about $5,000 
per month or about S60JX» aimu- 

aDT- 

The city collects almost 
$400,000 annually from other 
water customers. 

The proposed changes are 
purely Ixtsiness contidmations, 
Davis said during the hearing 
' last week. The company has 
been contacted by a number of 
' vendors <rf waste treatment tech* 

— nology^and-JaTTOe Cheese is ~ 
exploring whether it would 
cheaper to treat its own waste, 
be said. 

Cheese company oHicials have 
met with loc^ officials of the 
state Divisiob of E n v ir m im^ml 
Quality about alternative waste 
treatment. But the oompsu^ may 
have a tough time treating its 
own waste. 


water quality regulations mean 


no new phosphorus discharges 
arc allowed, said Mike 
Mc&fascers of the Twin Falls 
Division of Environmental 
Qual^ ofHce. Phoqihorus is pre- 
sent in most sewage and is con- 
sidered one of the contributors to 
nuisance plant growth in the 
Snake River. 

Removing all the phosphorus 
from the cheese plant waste 
would be expens i ve, McMasteis 
said. But the plant could apply 
for a permit to spread tte waste 

ground. The amount of land 
needed would depend on any 
pre-treatinenc and the contents 
of the waste water. 

Meanwhile, the restrictions on • 
waste water disdiaige alw affect 


a proposed Jerome dcv’clopmcnt. 
Proponents of the proposed 
Crossroads Ranch development 
at the intersection of- U.S. 

. Highyray* 93 and Interstate 84 arc 
looking for sewage treatment 
capacity. 

Jerome County CommistioRcr 
Roy Prescott .and others have 
broached the idea of sending 
Crossroads* sewage across the 
Snake River Canyon to the Twin 
Falls sewage treatment plant. 
But Twin Falls too has to meet 
.the strictures of pbllutionJimits, - 
-ond-ic-hss no JildiliuiiJt mcess 
cipadiy. 

Times-News lerifcr N.S. 
Sokkentved am be tvoehed at 733~ 
0931. Ext. 237, or by e-mail at 


' As-sodatioa. 

. All the skydivers on boerd- 
. Mere m em ber s of the Parahawks. 

a skx-dixing jyoup that apparent- 
, ly had gathovd at the airpon for 
its three-day annual pig roatt and 
campoui. The ci eni reponedJy 
M'as to end Sanirdav. 

A~R'dinan wno answered 'trie 
• telephone at the Parahawks skv- 
. diving center at Marine City 
Airport refused to discuss the 
— cluborthc uotiL : 

“Thirisa Tcry 

said James Rclken. the local R^ 
Cross diapier dirMor. who was a • 
the oasis dt/- counseling f'lTmlirt 
of the XTCtims. "The immediate 
f;imdy may not be here, but tlwy're 
extende d family m ^arh 
That’s very evideia." 


"nrary Health in Boise 
welcomes ear, nose and tfiroat 

John A. Bovajian, HAD-/g A c , <? 

WrimytbU Turin pMtirmtt to t-itit him as omr 

Of. h.iy4jijti ix trfiifioJ lu- thf n.unf of 

C)(iil4r>i.p.l..K>-, Neck Suijxry ind , frllmc- of the -AmrrKjn 

pillepr of Sur];n>'n». 

H/ cirned hl> dt^rrr from dtc. 
itidtJtu Untvcwirx' Schoci] of Xlrdionr m 

lntlbtup..li». Indiini. ,nd i.tmiUrr, tn 

'I 

cs'r Or, h eunrntfy icccpting 

\\ piiirnu. Ftir in ippointman. ciS^ 

‘ .V ( 2 flf 0 . 144 - 4 . 191 . 


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.Formo(Sen. Bill Bradley signs q basketball for.a supporter this post week at a funtf-rsUer In Chicagii. 

Bradley tries to cut in on 
Gore’s dance with Bush 


By Sandra Soblleraj 

The Aasoclated Press 

WA^INCT0K_- Al Gore 
— xvjiK^nly.iiL^tanpto-u’iUUCowrg^ 
\V. Uiisli, I’hh after months of qui- 
etly shaking hands and raising 
money, Hill Bradley is ready to 
insist on cutting in. 

Bradley, the vice president's 
only rival for the Democratic 
prusidcntiul nomination, is 
unwilling to he unknown any 
lunger. 

His voliiiuecrs knocked on 
.«P.PPP.. doors, in 22._N.ew_ 


council, meeting in Chicago next 
week to discuss the once- 
inevitable endorsement of Gore, 

, is likely ta hold off _any rcco m- 
llmc n dauoa.u t itil^tt. l oatt.Q c tolwr,— 
one top union official said 
Thursd,ay. 

Looking ahead to the curly fall, 
Bradley is also polishing propos- 
als on his priority i.uucs; univer- 
sal health insurance, child pover- 
ty, education, foreign policy and 
the economy. 

"Unlike Al Gore, who has cer- 
tainly achieved a level of famil- 


•The next hurdle tackle is ing season, 
to raise the level of knoivlcdgc Dissemination of the letter fol- 
dial people have-Dboui Bill loivs a biiarrc week in whicli die 
Bradleyjnd v^mt be will do as... head of-ilic town section of-tho 


ANDERSON. S.C..- GOP Sen. 
John McCain met with tiundrc^ 
of veterans during his iveckend ' 
— x2iropaign.touiLoLSdutiL.CaroIiiial.-.. 
bt^orc he nm into one ivho sliarcd 
a vciy spcdal bond with the for- 
mer Vietnam POW running for 
■ president. 

-• — ^JamM-WUliam-”Bni”^Bailc>Ta 

SG-yuar-old school iidmini.straror 
from Anderson, I 


North Vieuiamc.se I 

pri’on'camp_at.ilic_. . , » 

same time as II) DflBi 

McCain and — ^ 

turned out 
Saturday to lend supiwrt. ' 

“He*s a man of integrity and 
honesty. I dunk he’s the |>est man 
QilalificJ'to run (or presidenfT' 

. B-niley said after greeting McCain 
outside the bus. 

At stops along his route, 
McCain addressed small but 
• cntliusiasiic crowds about how 
money lias corrupted tJte poUdeal 
- process in Wadiington. 

Reiigioustonservatlve 
leaders support Forbes . ' ~ 

' . DESMdiNES.Jm«i-^l>bslicr.- 
Steve Pdrbcs’ effort to broaden 
his political base got a boost 
Saturday when a dozen con.scrva- • 
ri\*e religious leaders signed o let- 
ter declaring him a leader of 
“America’s new con.servniivc 
moveinent." -. 

"He knows tbiit tiic libcrtic.s we 
enjoy arc rooted in faitli," said 
tlu: letter, .mailed to con.scrvaiivc 
activists around tlic state where, 
precinct caucuses in February 
launcli the presidential nominat- 
ing season. 

'Dissemination of the letter fol- 
lows a bizarre week in whicli tiic 


loriul in Friday's Wall Street 
Journal predicting slie would skip 
die race and perhaps find_on easi- 



er job to wuCsuch a.s head of thej 

World Bank. . — 

-Compiled from wire reports- L 




RALJHEST 

WHAT THE WEST WEARS” 




-tifesidentT^B uni i sa id. — 

But in the contest to dominate 
policy, Gore is focusing on Bush, 
the Texas governor and 
Rcpuhllcan frontrunner.. 

On Friday, the vice president 
ouiiincd his proposals for target- 
ed tax breaks to help middle- 
class Americans pay for long- 
term health care, adult education 
and retirement s.'ivings. 


ihimpiilnre lbwri.s last week and ~^oy.^I~vico pre.sideht to Bill . ....... 

the^did^e rolling . "more end more ejwited about 

The former New Jersey .senator soniorBradlcy'adviser Xnita hopes to lock himself into a “ver^ommlited to following 
inaugurate d hisjown-b^^^^ ,L u..u ..t thrwigh on this." . , 

Gtiro to Chicag o this wee k for :i this year raisin g mon e y - banking PresidcnLGinion:s.polides that .come to!dSariagJjer candidacy 

meeting wlth Jesso’J|nckso'n’s ' '57101111011-10 Gore's $9 mtlilon-i It woutd''al(qfU>e-cuiTem;course"- since- forming her Senate 


yqif7r^..^B9CjiQ.iniLa.; —JBy— arguing.-foc-nactow tax .—.Senato— candidate — Hillary — j 


Cliristiuii't;oiiiUK>n ot America 
charged dial Forbes approached 
her temporary employment 
'agency about hiring people to 
vote for him in Iowa’s August 
. straw poll. 

Rfst lady denies Interest 
in finding a different Job , 
BATH, N.Y. - Prospectiv'e, . I 


relief over the broader. 
Republican tax cuu rolling 


Rodham Clinton says she is 
"more end more excited about ’ , 


’ soniorBradlcy'adviser Xnita 
Dunn. 


hopes to lock himself into a 
debate with Bush witlioui offer- 


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Rainbow Ctialition. a.cbre.group.. and making low-key visits with 
Ilf Democratic activists.* Iowa and New Hampshire voters. 

He lias ussiditously courted Bradley plans a splashier road 
labor union leaders and stoked 'sliow.in early September, with a 
tiiuir differences tvitli Core over -fall kickoff in lus hometown of 
trade. The AFL-CIO executive Crystal City, Mo. 


of economic prosperity. .! . 

"Tlic vice president wclcomcr ’ 
a compare-and<omrast with the 
Republicans, including the presi- 
dential candidates,” said Gore - 
spokesman Chris Lcluinc. 


“very committed to following 
thrtMJgh on this.” . 


..come lo.deditfing Jter. candidacy 


.committee on hilv 6 . 
Mrs-'Climoh said at a “listening 
eveni“ at a Bath library Friday 
tliat site was “having a very good 
lime" on the campaign trail. 

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-Bush takes-aim-on New 

Hampshire primary voters . 

CONWAY, N.Il. (Al’) - George up your mind, give me a good 
W. Bush glad-handed the nation’s look, If you are for someone else, ’ 
first primary voters Saturday, that’s okay. Don't work loo hard.” 
ignoring swellering heat, a com- As many ns 500 people greeted 


pundits who say voters aren t 
read.Hii' midsummer to pick a . 
president. . 

In New Hampshire, the 

Kepiiblican front-runner is doing ^IB 

dill what aciivist.s believe candi- All I MW 

dates must do to win the first-in- Hll I 

the-nation primary: shake hands, l^r 

kiss babies, Mi]) hamburgers at 

ciHikoiils. He's also avoiding the A 

miscucs that ihrentuncd liis 

father’s New Hampsiiire race in ^ 

1988, wJien the senior George \ I " 

Bush, then vice president, I I 

appeared alpof uniM advisers ■ #■ tt\m a 

tlianged stniiegics 'fo ii-ssure'more |•UOIU^g lOl 3 

mlx-andmiihgIc-'Wiih'v()lers. M«i.. ^ 

"If you are for me, thank you IhCW vOD • 

for your vote,” he told a crowd ■ ■■ > 

that greeted him in Conway, a - wIICK liGrGi 

tourist town-'ln the White 7 ' ' .'T 

Wouniaihs:“If you haven’t made P**:^^*'^*’ adron the imemen— 


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MVRMC and Magic Valley OB/GYN Announce the Arrival-of Darren Coleman, M.D, 

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-Angry women eom^tp Dole’s defense 



WASl UNGTON lAP) J For her 
63rd hirthdny; Elhnbctli Dole 
scooped up $200,000 courtesy of 

ii sinall 'anny^ of businesswomen 

angry that one of ihcir own - and 
the first to seek the presidency - 
was not faring better in a field of 

— -“WoVo hooping her in tho nia — 
ning,” dcdoredBannieMcElveen 
Hunter, die newly political entre* 

_ prcncur now in charge of build- 
. ingl^ole's $2 million bankrolL . 

, It was a Wall Street JouriMl 
article lato in the winter that 
^ticked off Mrs. Hunter just 
enough to reach for her check- 
book for the first time in'any 
political race. - - 


“There was"Elizahetli Dole 
dead lust behind someone jiuincd 
Cory -Bauer,” Mrs. Hunter 
recalled aiwut the story ratiking 
the presidemial candidates’ fund- 
raising fortunes. 

- “I thought to myself, hmv could 
a tvoman who's dedicated her life 
-to-publie-^servlce-and-turncd— 
around die Red Cross lie behind 
someone I’d never even heard 
of?" „ ^ . 

■ That was in thu year’s first • 
three months, when Dole, despite 
a heady lead in some polls, drew 
jmt $700,000 in coniribution.s. Dy 


Texas Gov. George W. Bush lias 
on liond. 

New York fiisliion designer 
Jhahe Barngs'- who has not 
voted since her parents pu.sbed 
her to the polls for R'icliarci 
Nixon and no longer is even reg- 
istered - was angered into help- 
-ing Dole wheii one of the 30-year- ' 
old women in her studio .said the 
country is notirendy for a woman 
president 


”1 was (lead in iny tracks, How 
could one of MV employees- say 
that to ME? It made lue mad," 
Barnes said.' "You create ymir 
. own reality and I want lo believe 
it's jiossible lo be president." 

Where New Hampshire horser- 
ace polls once showed Dole 
ahentiTininitiiTitiiinfotTTTniint'Dir- 
under 20 percent of the vote in 
surveys, compared with Bu-sli’s 40 
percent or lielter 



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Rapubllcan well-wlihsn present prei Idential hopeful DIubeth Dole, left, with o 
cake on hor 63rd birthday, Thursday, at a fund-nilier in Wlnstoit-Salotn, N.C. 

Hatch wants Iowa to 
tighten ballot security 

WEST DES MOINES, Iowa tion it looks to me like some pco- 
(AP) - Utah Sen. Orrin Hatch, pie are trying to buy it," said 

dting perdstem repom of_cam-I Hotch.,..:^ 

paign-mischiefi-baa-09k^*3tate- ' - - “The rumors are'tharGcorgc 
Republican Party leaders to Bush is going to spend somc- 
tighten ballot security for next thing like $4 million on this. I 
month’s straw poll. don’t know how he can do it 

“Even the merest hint of such • without buying votes.” 
activities,- true or not, threaten 
the integrity of the straw poli,” 

Hatch wrote in a letter to Iowa | 

Republican Party executive 
director Dec 
Stewart. 










A-12 - TImet-Ww tt, Twin Fallt. Idaho Sunday, aiipiit i, idao 


World 


Hungry Congolese mm . 


RgportLRjussiaiLbaDkJiidjTansactbns^^^^ 

SWJSSJVIEMORIAL 


MOSCOW - Auditors have 
found tliat Russia's Central Bank 
■ kept Its transactions \Vith an off- 
shore company off its accounting 
books and hid the profits it made 
on the nation's treasury-biU mar- 
ket, a newspaper reported 
Saturday. 

The re port comes j ust da ys 

after the International Monetary 
•Fund approved a new, 54.5 bit' 


World In brief 


■ lion loan 
program 


■ ^ ^ 

The news again raises ques- 
tions of whether Russian finance 
• offidols-have-been straight with 
Western lenders, whether they 
are truly committed to reforming 
— thu.-hatterud— economy— and — 
whether they have violated not 
only IMF guidelines, but also * 
Russian imv. 

Tlie auditors from 
PriccWaterliouscCoopcrs have 
been working on a contract for 
die IMP, whicii wanted to learn 
more about the Central Bank's 
relationship with the Financial 
Management. Co, or-FIMACO, 



A gW t«ndi 10 (lewars and candlei at the ahote of Lake Brleiu, Swltierfamf, 
Saturday. Tha nieniorlali were placed near the elte of Tuesday's canyaninf 
accldentat the neiiby Saxeten brook where at least 20 tourists lost their 


But the commission advised 
- parents agoinsi-checring-when 
the bull is killed. 

Instead, parents should praise 
the bravery of the animal - and 
tlic bulifi^tcr. And they should 
accentuate the pageantry of it all; 
the sequins ,'tnd colors of the 
-nutadorTsfiuit, Uie drum roUs,-tlie- 
trumpet blasts. 

Composed of four teams of psy- 
chologists from universities 
around Spaiii,- the commission' 

I said parents may_not want jo,_, 

bring youngsters who arc espe- 
aoUy sensitive or aggressive. 

Russian' tfboprcietaln KLA . 
military commander 

PRISTrNAT~*Vu'Bo^ovIa " 
Russian troops stopped and held 
the military commander of the 
Kosovo Liberation Army for 
about two hours Saturday in an 
incident that heightened ethnic 
Albanian su.tpicion.< about the 
Russian presence in Kosovo. 

Hashim Tlioql, the political ’ 
leader of the KLA, said the inci- 


. PARK, Congo (AP) - Lubangb 
Bulabi and his 22-ycar-old son 
• lived on game before their forest 
home was turned into a money- 
making gorilla reserve. Now, hun- 
gry Banva Pygmies of southeast- 
ern Congo say they have no 
clioicc but to resume their hunt' 
for lowland gorillas and antelope 


The two men, barefoot and 
clothed in ruB.s were cauglit last 
week in tho dense forest. of 
Kahusj-Biega-Nationol-Pnrk-on— 
suspicion of poaching gorillns. 
Fueled by Congo's secbhd-v 


less, jobless ond musi feed h 
two children and wife. ; 

; “I was looking for honey in tl)e 
forest to cat and setting up ani- 
mal traps when they caught mei” 
he said. | 

In 1970 when the park was cre- 
ated, the government cvictcjd 
Bulabi without compensation.' 

~ ' in^ micmnn n j-#>mnr ^ f 

two wacs have left in the pa^'k 
defenseless from poachers and its 
infrastructure in tatters. ■ I 


in three years, illegal hunting has 
come dose to wiping out the goriJ- 
lns;~forest elephants' and“ 
antelopes. 

Tlieir southeastern Congo jun- 
-gle-habirarrtuckcdbcmTcnthir'r 
steep mountain peaks of Kahuzi 
and Diego and tiie cocky sliorcs of 
.Lake Ki\’u, once attracted thoii- 
sonds of tourists eoeh year, 
induding Microsoft founder Bill 
Gates. The UmUUon acre park 
was dosed to visitors a year ago 
after Rwandan-backed rebels 
took up arms against Congolese 



.. Roods worsen Iri. northern 
India/deathTdll tops 150 ' 

NEW DELHI, India - Floods 
from heavy rains .spread across 
nortHcrn India Saturday, sub- 
merging 25 villnge.s and forcing 
15, 000 people from their homes 
m Uihar .stale, a news agency 
reported. 

Two people drowned Saturday 
in the high waters, the United 
News of India reported, raising 
the death toll tlUs month to 154. 
Tltc floods were caused by annu- 
al monsoons that caused four 
rivers to overflow. 

.Authorities were concerned .. 

- that“5 million people could be at ' 
risk from w.aterborne diseases. 
TIic government was distributing 
medicines, water purifying 
-■ tablets and antidotes for snake 
bite.s, the agency' s;iid. 

Author questions what Japan 
did with bank bailout money 


For'japaTi’s government last 
March, the answer w:as simplc:_ 

-hail n n rn httnrh nf 

decision so outraged one of 

Japan’s best-known writers that 

_hi> h:i< u-ri»K.n nmiciml _ 


Ryu Murakami's latest book is 
actually 'iifure ofTlist: 122 other ' 
wayff-ma't'th'e'SGO billion could 
have been put to u.se. 

And while it looks like a chil- 
dren’s book, with its big, colorful 
illustrations and .simple explana- 
tions, Murakami said Its mc5.<Higc 
is anything but childish. 

"I wanted to give the public the 
informationi in a very under- 
standable formal, so they can 
decide for themselves whether 
this was the best choice,". 
Murakami told The Associated 
Press. For instance, readers dis- 
cover that a fraction of the , 
- moncy.-aboiir S7 btlllonr could 
teach all Uie'illiicnitc children in 
developing countrie.s how to read 
and write. Add 56 billion, and you 
could also buy blankets for all the 
linmcless children in those coun- 
tries. And enough would still be 
left over to, say, dean up all the 
world's land mines for 533 billion. 

Rescuers find 19th body 
_after.goldJnInBjilast 


__ The bodies ofjili ihe_mincrs _ _ 

wKo died.'in the rniTihanc blast Russian troops“fdl>nng sinhiliiy 


•dcnrwas-a-pfcmcdlrated.-pollti- — Preadent-Laurent Kabila— 
cal act” and that it “vcrific.s our then, park officials say , 

doubts about the ability, of poadicrs have killed 114 lowland 


- late Thursday liavc been recov- 
ered, said James Duncan, 
spokesman for Anglogold, which 
owns the Mponeng gold mine 
southwest of Jolianncshurg. 

lie said rescuers equipped with 
special breathing masks located 
the 19U) miner's body in an area 
near the site of the explosion. 
Twenty other miners were lifted 
to safety after the explosion in 
the mine, one of the world’s deep- 
est. None of those rescued was 
injured. The blast was die tvorsi 
mining disaster for Anglogold, 


0 Kosovo.” However, a Russian 
officer defended his troops, say^^ 


ing they were .simply following 
ilic terms of the demilitarization 
agreement that the NATO-led 
peacekeeping force reached with 
the rebel group. 

A spokesman for the peace- 
keepers, Maj. Roland Lavoie, 
called it “a minor incident.” 

Gen. Agim Ccku, the KLA’s 
military leader, was traveling in 
the village of Kijevo, west of 
Ihistina, when he was stopped at 

a Russian checkpoint. Under the 

Uie \vorld's'largcsr gbId'priduccr,D~^,*.^ny.'dcntilitarlzarlon agree-. ■ 
since 10-1 pcunle were killed in ' nient, KLA commanders are still 
allowed to carry .side arms and 


■■gorillasralmosraJlrihe reser\nr.>r“ 
3D0 forest elephants and untold 

miml)crs of antelnnc. 

"TliisTs a camjige,” said park 
director Norlwn Mushenzi. 

Like other poachers in the 
area, Bulabi. doesn’t think he is 
duTtig anything wrong. The 50- 


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CARLTON VILLE, South 
-Afriai - Resale lenms..seaixhing 
^ TThlhe^iait coniamtiiatcd 


since 10-1 people were killed in 
.1995 when an underground lift 
piTimiiicted into the Vaal Reefs 
mine west of Johannesburg. 

Psychologists offer hints 
for taking kids to bullring 

MADRID, Spain - Watching a 
matador slay a bull is no worse 
than watching "a scary movie on 
-telc\*ision .” .wy psydi olt^gywfao- 
werc asked to deicnpinc if chil- 
dren.under 14 sliould be barred - 


and his proposals are striking a- 
chord with many readers. 


with gas and smoke Saturday 
found the body of a 19th gold 
rktlledjii UK explosion more 


irom bullfjglit.*>. 

A commission set up by 
Madrid’s regional government to 


s remo 

■ , . consider IturisSutLcancludi 

than 1.5 miles undcr^pund, mine there was no rca.son to ban i 
officials said. “ cliilclren from tlie buUring. 


wear uniforms, but they must 
cany an identification card i.ssucd 
by the peacekeeping force. When 
C^ku was unable to produce the 
card, Lavoie said, Russians held 
him and iiis security detail until 
his identity was established. 
Lavoie pointed out that every 'I 
peacekeeping soldier could not be 

-expected-lo-recogn ize -every-KLA — 
commander. 

■_ “Accordin g to t he agreement,. 
every man wio has tTgun and 
hasn’t permission must bo 
stopped and disarmed,” said 



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World 



--Bl^r-^alls-f0r-eHd-t0-K0sev<3wi©lenjpe- 


f home Tueiday, Ethref Latifl looks Uirough his apwtmeflt which w»s rartsseked by Sorb mlUtsiy forces dur- 
ing the NATO bombing campaign. - - - — 

Home from America 

Refugee family remembers good, bad of U.S. 

PRISTINA, Yugoslavia (AP) - 
Living in the United States was 
unlike Jinything back home for 
•• -Izedin-Lntifi;- But-after returning — 
to Kosovo ffbm more than two 
months in American self-exile, 
home also isn't like It used to be - 
for the ethnic Albanian refugee 
und his famUy. 

NATO troops greeted their bus 
it entered Koso*'o last week, 
rather than the Set ’v'lice who 
used to harass them at check- 
points. 

Albanian flags that Serb 



. PRISTINA. Yugoslavia (AP) - 
British Prime Minister Tony 
- Blair mudd a triumphant visit to 
Kosovo's capital Saturday, urg- 
ing grateful ethnic Albanians 
who gave him (lowers and kisses 
' to live in peace with ri\-al Serbs. 

It was Blair’s first trip to 

Kosovo, since, the. cnd-oCNAIOIs^ 

bombing campaign against 
Yugoslavia and the return of 
hundreds of thousands of ethnic. 
Albanian refugees driven off by - 

Serb forces. : 

“~rDespite-the-3S;000‘NATD“ 
troops in Kosovo, violence has 
continued, mostly in revenge 
attacks by ethnic Albanians on 
Serbs for the killings, rapes and 
forced removals that prompted 

— the-NATO attacks; 

Blair told scvcriil hundred peo- 
ple gathered in the city center 
that NATO fought'the war to 
bring peace and justice to 
Kosovo, not to oUotv the minority 
Serbs in rhcyprovince to be 
oppressed. 

**We know that. justice must 
apply to all people whatever 
— thaii^raco,-whatavar-iheir-reli — 
gion, whatever their class, what- 
ever their'background,** he 
— declared'tn a-spccch regularly 
-intemipred by chants-of “Tonyl " 
Tdayl" and shouts of “Thank 

— ytw; Tony.“ — 

Eariicr, as Blair left the U.N. 
hcadquancfs. a young boy broke 
ihrou^ a li^t security cordon - 
to hand him a bouquet of Howers 
and receive a hug. A young 
woman.ncarby jumped up and 
down in excitement after Blair 
allowed her to give him a kiss. 

Blair took a 10-minuie walk in 
the dty center to greet residenis 
and British soldiers serving in 
the NATO peacekeeping force. 

-He also planted o tre e to symb ol- — 
uc the rcBundfng orKosovo. ~ ' 
“What has. given me pleasure 
more than anything else is to sec . 
the young children today living 
again in their homeland in 
peace.” Blair said during his 
speech. “This hope we have for 
the future, this belief in a differ- 
ent future for Kosovo and for 
this part of the world, this hope 
lies in the hands of these chil- 
dren. 


“I look forward to the day 
whciiXcome here iigain when 
Pristina is rebuilt, when Kosm-n 
is rebuilt and when .ill people 
here live in justice and p.irtner- 
ship and friendship.'' 

Blair risited British troops for 
scverdl hours Friday niglit after 


.aiten(^>g.a-ivoiildlsuniinit-un Itugiwa 




tnUkaii stability in Sarajevo. 

Bosnia-lleriegovina- 

Blair met Saturday inormiiK 
with the Ic.idcr of tiic Kosovo 
Liheralion .Army. Hashini Tliaci. 
and held a separate meeting 
with TIuici'-s main |)oIiticul riv.il. 
moderate poliiici.-in Ibrahim 



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said of finally making 
home, _ _ . ■ 

It was the end of an unpre- 
dictable journey that began in 
temrwhen Serb police and para- 
military fighters forced tliousonds 
‘ of Kosovo Albanians - including 
the Latifis.- from their homes in 
the provincial capital on March 
31. 

NATO’s bombing campaign 
ngoinst Yugoslavia had stoned a 
week earlier, giving the Latifis 
— hopo-for-a-dedsive-<urn-in-the— 
conflict between Kosovo's ruling 
Serbs and its Albanian majority. 

Then came the sudden pound- 
ing on the door. '' ' 

Like many of the 860,000 
refugees who fled, the Ladfis had 
' no rimc^TOTtrab cxmi ebt^ 

■ inuch'inoncyrih thcirho^e, they ’" 
even left bread baking in the 
-oven.' 

II All 48 of them, from Ahmet 
down to toddling grandchildren 
and grcat-nicccs, ended up in 
neighboring Macedonia. They 
' spent a few days in the Stenkovac 
•-^-ca^^^Mt up_by NATO until o 
.cousin in Skopj^ theMacedoman-':. 
capital, took Uiemin. 

..._When word . came of NATO. . 


every 

_t^g changed when the family 
arrived at ForTDix m New Jersey,' 
' greeted by hundreds of other 
Kosovo Albanians as well as plen- 
tiful, food, comfonable beds and 
$50 per person spending money. 

Izcdin's brother Enver. 18. 
described the U.S. Army bo» as 
“fantastic." 

gnsiL.Thc place 
. good," Enver said. “The only 
problem was that we couldn't go 


would leave done., 

. His brother AbdulJdi. 22^ said . 
the International Institute 
Momed the family lostay home at 
night with the doors locked. 

'ibc institute also g.Tvc advice 
on.hoiv to act. “Smile, even if it is 
a false anile. That means you arc 
friendly," Abdullah quoted an 
institute volunteer as saying. 


24 hours a da/, 
seven days a week! 


So they did what Europeans 
with time on their bands do - 
played soccer. They even formed 
'a tcam;that took on the American 
soldiers at the camp. “Wc won 13- 
4." Enver said with a laugh. 

Then cousin Gazurr coded, from - 
— StrLouis, • w h er e he had mov^ — 
with otha* refugees, to say he had 
a house. After five weeks at Fort 
Dix, the family traveled farther 
west. . This time, though, things 
weren’t .so nice. The house in a 
rough southside neighborhood 
had only one bed for nine people 
. oqd a small-Black-and-v^te tele — 
vi^on.~The agency handling the 
refugees, the International 
Institute, gave^them a credit caril ' 


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Editorial 




A bad place to raise kids? 
jiDon’tpaek-the^O-Haul-yet- 


Joumjilists aru hopeless suckers for rate of juvenile crime, llie only worse 
stiiiisHcal rankings. Tell us our state is places are Suutii Dakota, Ucah>and 

No^ in.Lhis-ihing, or-No.-46-in-tliat - Wisconsin. — 

th’ing, and we'll he on the stoty like Does that sound crazy? Impossible? 
magpies on ruadkill. You bet. 'ITiese four states have more 

It liappo pecU aHain-last-week-. The cows than Crips;- 

Children's Rights Council, a national But the stats don’t really measure 
advocacy group, put out findings that crime. They measure arrests. Idaho. 


purported nrshtn\“tvhich-srate?n^'eVe cops and courts have been aggressive: 
the best places to Iv targetine-vouth 

children. ' • • 


TWIMIfAtUsr 


SEWER 
PLANT— 
S miles' 


raise 

j Measured by'a set of 
10 indicators, Idaho 
ranked a miserable 
41_st. Oh, woe to 
Idaho’s kids. 

Newspapers and 
— X-V — news — show; 


Of ihe 10 rvporfai statistics, 
so/nczirrv inisleac/hig, and 
one tisas obsolete. 


crime, especially^ 
status offenses such 
as drinking. So our 
arrest rate is high. 
Good fur us. - ’ 
Here’s a third hay- 
wire star: Tlie Chil- 
dren ■5-Rights"Couh' 


lapped it up - naturally! - because the cil says 28 percent of Idaho 2-year-oIds 
story was deliciously counterintuitive, lack immunizations. That puts us in 
Everyone in Idaho thinks our stale is the bottom three stales. But 'Hardin 
a great place for kids. Is everyone happily reports that the number is out- 
-W^png?,. — ^ dated.- Gov.T)irk Kemt>thome’s mudi- 


No, -as it turns out, everyone is not publicized drive to vaccinate diildrcn 
wrong. After the story came out, we has improved our immunization rate 
went to'tlie Internet and evaluated the by 7 percentage points in one year, 
report’s raw numbers. We concluded and he’s not finished yet. 

_tha.t some.of .the_report’s.damning Unfortunately, some of Idaho% unfa- 

statistics were misleading, and one vorable scores aren’t so easily 
\vas obsolete.' Only two arp as disturb- explained avNay. Our divorce rale is in 
ing as th''y initially appear. _ the top 10 nationwide. More than 21 
Perhaps the most hollow statistic is percent of expectant mothers don’t 
the one that assigns Idaho the nation's receive prenatal care, giving us the 
highest rate of child abuse and nation’s seventh-worst record. Hardin 




_ ^neglect. A.chaLwithRbseanneHardin -says-the state is working on tlie second - 
Depa^enr of HealthTafi'd 'isSie,"aYwclITt 'should. 


Govemmentrieeds toT^t 

C 


Welfare put that into perspective. Most of the other stats show us in 

The first thing to note is that the the middle of the pack. Correcting the , 
stat.s don t really measure diild abuse, misleading ones would probably put . 1 
They measure child-abuse referrals, us well above average. 

B '6 difference. . But hero’s the important point to 

Ilofoin sees two main, reasons for rememben How you raise your diiid is 
Idaho’s high referral rate. One, she a lot more important than where. 
thinks-Idahoans have a strong sense of Think about what goes into promot- 
public responsibility. They’re willing ing a child's well-being. Love. Effective • 
iostid|^their_Qfifks.ouLby-rcpoctiDg— discipliner-Guod-role-mudelsr-Proper 
abu.so and neglect. 1 \vo, Hardin’s agon- nutrition. Decent, medical care, 
cy recordS'Somc cases that'woUldn’i Spiritual guidance. Protection from 
111 uihcr. states. " , hazSrdsrA'sounucUucauon. • i 

So the statisdeal comparison is pret- Most of those ihing.s come from par- 


onservatives ri^tly s^ the 
Corporation for Public 
Broadcast^ is aldn to the 
body polidc’s appendix— i-es- 
tigi^ purposeless and occa- 
:rionnliy.m>ubIcsomcrBui.the CRBIsoir- - 
rcmly useful in revealing the emptiness 
of Republican praise of limited goveni- 
mem. 

Louisiana Congressman Billy Tauzzn 
was one of Uic two Democrats who sup- 
ported the Republicans’ 2994 Canoao 
with_.^cr)ca, and in 1995 he changed 
.parties. He is a conservative who favots 
the tlicory of Umiied government and the 
practice of protecting, with tariffs, 
Louisiana craM-fish from the coiapctiDcm 



PBS funding 


3 S12 bQlian boost fimm workers made 
more productive by adult educa- 
ooa OQ public television. 


fed e raD y 's u hqriire d stations the govem- 
mesr thinks America’s almost 9,500 com- 


FSS daesa\ da a. who won?* Vho? 
ffisaty fh»TTnr\naiawe.^ AmA 


the CP6 indicate^ that heis havinga 
hard time getting the hang of being a- 
'RepubllcanTBulftlien, sb~aiv many 


a does am — they as eppesed ce 

Dsxmt^ taxes 

' ' Tlie ibimk'adnite 


vhTUQso rendition of the seif -congratula- 
tory gusfa characteristic of subsidized 
broadcastets. NFR. he said, **is beyond 
pubCcses^nce-it’s<>naiio^ciesenae" - 
providing “enlivened reparang” 
‘’cultural programs that c^brate the 


ty m udi meaninBloss. If it shows _a nv-_e nts.jiotJrom'gQvommt»rit...«;o.ih».kp^ 

' thing.ai alI,.iLshows.thc-Statc.is....qucsdon.is noi.whcthcr.your-statu-iK-a- 
aggressive about procucting kids. good place to raise children, but 
• Another upside-down statistic says whether yolir home is. 

Idaho has the nation’s fourth-highest Statistics can’t give you the an-siver. 



jTheTImes-S&s 


House Republicans. 

--Tlie Gomtncfcc Cc. , 

'ice Ta'uzih chairs w^spois^ to increase. 
' fuinilng' for the CPB, Which subsdiaes 
public television and radio, Mhen the 
fuss cruptodiSSout public tclci'ision sta- 
tions swapping mailing lists with pcdidal 
organizations, mostly Democradc Tlie 
resulting uproar, a distruetion from the 
larger point, may actually have beneT' 
public broadcasters: By promising to 


takes C 7 LeVar Burton, actor (he played' 
Kmica Kinro in the minaserics **ReotO ' 
■ Jnrt hott ofczbePSSdtiktreB’s televisioo — ^ 
series ’‘Riodmg Rainbow.*' He let loose ; , 
dm. requisue gudk ( PBS tt a ‘‘idiiaiiij; 

is about tbekids*VFBS hripr 


Tntirrpc rfi». Cpff 

{days tim 


hnSvidiEils and caring huinan beings _. 
seeing in every one of them a seed of 
gjriainmss’* and doing everything nur- 
ture that seedT), tben he diqilayH a ccH 


Stephen Hartgen PuMliher 

— Ctartt Watwenn Maiujjng editor ■■ 


'Hllid Smit .....Adyertlilnc aiwclcr 


The members of the cdilorial board and writers of editorials are Stephen Hartgon, William 
Brock, Clarh'Walworlh, -Slave Crump and Kevin Richer! 


-L-eaajcd meat-Compares- 


desist from such p^irlrar smpiduy, the 
. broadcasters have quelled any remaining 
..resistance to tlicirrc^ as expensive *- 
_J _exainples n f niltnrT»l 

Created in 1967osa liIigrceonL}'ndoo 
Johnson's Cre.i» Sodet>\ the CPB was ,• 
-J-suppjwedb’^uccessarybecmsewer^he: — 
I itir broadcasting allowed feu’ comped- - 
-I tors, who were driven to seek broad audi- 
ences by catering to the lowest common 
cultural denominator. The rationale for 
.nublic hroadcasting was mnrv»-lnndv 


Ax die Jane 30 bear^gedTwas's SQ&- 
“ ' “ iLvJnsxpccSB- 


Tbe moon we have such phones is 
dac ’’vnme kid gr e w up watching 'Star 
Trek* and saw Captain Kirk reach behind 
tPtfLit placeon his hip and pull that 

thing out and can Scotty on the ship. 

That kid then grew up, became an engi- - 
' ■’adeviCe'lhafSas 



mgnia^linges3azssiB!5:gpKap£asu»- 
, lia based <B die ciiBataBs &WS 

**Sesame StreeC *B3iaey & FrkBdL'' 

‘TeJendiBcst.*’ “it 


nicely with chicken or fish 


G ive ibnnks. beef lovers. 

Rese.irchers have recently 
discovered tile genetic path 
to producing lean but lender 
beef... 

Fanc>' steak houses can already guar- 
antee tender l>eef. They buy carcas.ses 
he.avily marbled with fat and age them 
— fur wceks-ina big refrigeraled:'‘chill-— —- 
- cooler." Tliis process is expensive, ns the 
restaurant’s menu will iiiform you,--' 
Consumers usually cun’t buy this - 
dioicc beef. Few. retail stores will p.ay the 
premimn to get it. or tie up their expen- 
.<avc_cooler space with beef carca.sstis 
. being aged. 

— 'Mc.imvhller>'our.doctor isTelllngyUii" 

that leaner beef is better for you, even if 
it's luuglt. 

Fonunately, re.search brenklhrouglis 
at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine 
in Baltimore and the Agriculture' 
Department's beef research center in 
Nebraska arc pointing the way to breed- 
ing cattle with nncumlly leaner and still- 
- tender beef. 


^alcd against refutation: Government ” 

- ' must subsidize alternative prognusming 
prcdsely beciuse few people want it. 

Tliiny-two years later, in a SOCkdiannd 
environment, litis rationale is as absurd 
. as public television’s recent slogan “If 



WdL Burton gave no evidence, there . 
bring none, for his fancifiil history of the 
cell pfaone. But even if his history were 
not nonsense, “Scir Trek" was on com- 
meroal television, so how did his fairy ’ 


for public televisioo? Tliere is no jusdfi- 
cati o n for it; nor for a Republlcaivcon- 
oroOed Congress that continues iL 


Carj-eF. Wm era Wcafjmgi^ Poa 


_ Tlic first step iri this cattle-breeding 
phenomenon came in cite early 1600s, 
wiiJi the introductioh of the Belgian Blue 
“double-’imisded" cattle breed. These 
cattle are born with large musdes, caus- 
ing them to resemble bovine Arnold 
Schwiirtcneggers. . 

However, this caii bea-s^rious repro— ^ 
- duction problem, because the oilvcs are 
often loo bulky-to clear the mother’s 
blrtli canal Few farmers can afford to 
. b-nve their calves delivered by Caesarian 

section. But genetic reseurch has recent- 

■■■lydiscovered that normiil-sizcd catdc 
have a ggne that codes for a protein 
called myosiatin. A mutated version of 

^hc g ene p roduces inactive myost atin 

Pand more ma-iclc fibers. . 

I A calf with two copies of the gene' for — 
* inactive myostatin bi»:omc.s "overmus- 
ded,” like the Belgian Blue. 

But researchers found that cattle with , 


only one copy of the gene look normal 
hut carry 7 percent more heef and 14 
percent less fat. That’s .1 breakihrouuli! 

Cattle breeders.ivilljiow.be.able to 

guarantee production of these leaner, 
...tncaiicr animals by testing blond samples 
tomakcsurccadicalfisbomwitlijusr . 
one copy of tlie gene. 

Contrary to public opinion, less fat 
. won't mean less lender beef. Heredity 
also jlays'a'big foie in tenderness. Tlie 

NebrnskaTcscarchers'wiil'ncxrsearch — ~ 

for die genes that control tciidenies.s. 

Some people blame meat, and espe- 
cidly red meat, for causing heart attacks. 
Will lean bu( tender beef Itirc loo many 
people into eating heart-unhealthy 
meals? Perhaps just the opposite. 

A reCcm study found that cadng C 
ounces of lean red meiit pcr'day.'evcir ' 

— five or more days per week, lowers heart 
attack risks by about 10 percent! 

In fiict, eating moderate portions of 
any low-fat meat reduces heart attack - 
risks, according to the study by Johns 
Hopkins University,' the University of 
Minnesota and the Chicago Center for 
Clinical Research. 

^The studyrpaid for by the beef indu-s- 

try and published in the Archives of . 

--Intenjal.Medidne, found that pcoplc_ 

■ who wm allowed to eat red meat were 
more likely to follow their lean diets than 
.. people who restricted chclrjood choices 
more narrowly. The keys were Ipw-fat 

' ond'modcnitc ponlon&'Eating lean beef 

•lowered the levels of “bad cholesterol" 

in the study participants, and.rdised.the.. 

_leycls.oL*.‘good.cholestcroL!’_j'_.L. 


Letters 


Handicapped parker needs permit 

^In re^y t o Bo n nie L eazer*s lencr of 

July^, please let me juiswct' 1, too, am 
handicappi^. I have diabetes, am ina 
wheelchair. Have been on ox>-g enfar 
more than tw'o j’carx and have had two 
cnnccrvpcrations, plus other operatums,' 
. allin a pcriodoflcss thannvoyears.1 
applaud whoever took the rime and 
.—offort-to write you a note and leaveii on' 
your car while you were in Fred JAeyer. 

. If you arc handicapped -md wirii to 
park in the handicapped parking area in 
any facility, you arc required by law to 
have either a handicapped lic ense plra 
or pchnit to hang in your car. Tliat is the 
law -you obviously had no such idenrify- 
- ing permit or plate, as I’m quite certain 
no note would have been on your car 
if you did. . _ . 

If nothing identifies you as handi- 
capped, what separates you htinanyape 
cl« that feels like parking diere berowe 
it is inorc convenient or just can't te both- 
ered to drive around and take time to look 
for a space? You have no idea bow hits- . 
trating it is to a handicapped pareoo to— 
find people parked in ^xices they are not 
entitled to, and we who are tcufyhandi'. . 
ropped ore. forced to It^elsmiereL T 

Ifyouarchandicappedipleaseseta ' 
permit, jvbkh on ti lies ypu to park in. that 

area, arid don't bl ame people that 

your-beingtlim! if you dbn* 

.PATSY SMITH 
- Twin Falls * 



Aladea is 

ace Jiaiixe, and ia some KcsL the peoedie 
diat Ihe there wodid Bx qaK a fiw 
beaiE. Ih^ aBoa\ roddy ben; and as; 


2I-pa0B brief Che folfowins S 

It c jqx e aaly farbfafa'ifae federal gbvei^ ~ 


es given CD them in Artide I Sectioa B 

the C i s aiuti o u of the -«Sm r r of d 

Affioca. This nilmg was upfaeldJiy five ^ 

. ■ « • .La — * . 


Dennis T. Avery is based in C/i«n:hi'i7/c. 
Vfl., and is dinxtor of global food issues for 
the Hudson Institute of Indianapolis. ■ 


JdahDJ)as.righi!toj^use£iiz^ie8. 


Your editorial about grioly being reio- 
troduced to Idaho was spot on the mark. 

1 flew helicopters in Alaska for quite a 



T2mefore.theguwetiMirnf T/fainw w 

xy state onijr has to enforce the ,t*- 

GxBtimtion oftfae UBteed States and tbkv ' 

Goatf ifuf u« nS >!,■ ^ni Ml ■* II I ^ 

•5 

MBEKEIXY 




)[ POOR COP 




_ SttUdiT. AucBst 1. 1999 HmetNew*. Twin fall*. IdJho A-IS 


AGfcU vsrtesebal^^^^ tests team’s ri: 

T he whole trip up to i , . . ■„ T T * 

H3gcraown.niv wife ami T \ i' r- S«achHrdibuU«in,wh.chinc; 

(IcboiedihS^cq^mil question MARCFISHER co^dn-i SCI iho duaxuii. 

ofour mission on bdialf of This w-as more than a jraragt 

truth, justice and the Tomnm RW i-.». rt. .. coum hav-e betai workny « iL 


_Q|>INIOj\L 


T he whole trip up tq 

^gcraown, my wife' and I 
debated the central quesuon 
of our mission on belialf of 
truth, justice and the 
American way; Which one of us would- - - 
fieno be the witch and wliich one the 

li'herTTifi-in? • - 

\Vc were going to the ballpark in this 
quiet Western Maryland town; a lovely, 
unilsniming old yart. It was Sunday, the . 
day of wor^p, the day of leisure. 
ToihcicwJiundred oihctfolks-who 

• decided ro while away thtir afe^ooh 

watching frcsh/aced boys play out major 
league dreams on a minor league field, 

we looked like fans.Burwewefe really — 

self-appointed majystrates in the coun of 
ilieculiurc wars. The battle between rea-' 
siiinm'd'falth. bsltwccn inoividual righLs 

and the commonweal, had invaded base- 
ball. and we were here to see just how 

I mthings had gone. 

Municipal Stadium, home of ihe~ 
Hagcrsiown Suns, Class A outpost of the 


Marc Fisher 

Toronto Blue Jays, this was, like all 
' Sundaj-s,-Chuiiii Bulletin Day.TMuch.’td' 
the team’s owners, was just one more in a 
loiTg^rocessjon oi promoQons- Golf^ 
Umbrella Giveaway Night, Floppy Cap 
Day, Business Person’s SpedaL • . . 

But tlien comeonc Carl Silverman, who 
docs not particularly believe in God and 
' ..who bdongs-tono churcli and who there- 
fore assumed that he was not eligible for 
the Giurdi Bulletin Day discount, whidi 
- 6<y5.a_familyofup to six into the ballpark 
for a total of 56 Just for sliot\‘ing their bul- 
letin a^ie gate. Whereas gcncral'admis- 

Diis being America, Silverman sued. He 
got the American Qvil Libcnics Union on 
his side, he got a gaggle of lawyers and he 
got a JumboPak of publicity. 

“Disaiminaiion!" they, cried, because 
Silverman, being an agnostic, couldn’t ~ 


get a churdi bulletin, whkb meant he 
couldn't get tbc discount. 

This was more than a svaragallK ' 
courts have been working oa iL In the 
meamme,m every SundQ- home^me. . . 
the Suns have plaj^ host to TV ar m s 
an d others who feed off mc h com rove r. 
sy. Nota wHolelotof acxital fans anend 
the games; and Y-oy few of ihm acrualh- 
bring a diurch buQedn. but the few 
dozen who do certainly enjoy their hefty 
discount. 1 can hap{dy rrpon^Tl^ gimc 

- -are competitive in tfaCT di visi oo d the ■ 

- South AtlomicLeagoe.andtfaey’Tegeea 
couple of pretty good 

' gamcsarcgenilefun: Aponlymagidan 
wears Na D2ao his unifono and shoots 
streamersintoihcairforihekids.When - 

— a 1(Vyrar-qld bcy^ilayingcatch with » 

friend between innings inadvertentlv 
tosscs hu softball onto the Flaying fidd. 
Suns third baseman Jesse Zepeda happi- 
ly trots'over to r e u i e v e the ball and gives 
the lad a wink and a gn Pe. 

1^1 digress. This is abMsometfaizig 


even m ere .A=crka= than' txticbuU. f:N ' 
abeefl pecyiie exemas^ tiseir God-cr. tn. 
to. ccesinskmzj to esuie oth».-r 
fc^'in'es a Iriing bsC ot 

Shc ^ to »»:g7y . 

-A resy- sane =za a: tisc .ACLU in 
•Balnmcee. acCiTun. erepiained 

that rtcirhet Mr~ Sherman nur the 
ACLU wants to ta e pr li e Strts tam o: 
ihcsr.GodCISaz- seep 
• crnece d tackecs. “ICix a!; cSrr.ACUTwants 
is far the *» » ' to the r.i — to 

mu!sr> |SU 7 ‘S heCetla - the ^ciry. the 

pood for eary. Afar ail the mere word 
I I . I >-.c-eVe^le'T?l£Hk 

they woedd ao( be asarpccil 
Hold CD. szys David SSTemritstoee. the 
Suns* geeerzl szaaper. Vo crc is mmed 
away co CSrarti Bc3ed= Day. They just 


kind of bulletin." Blunck.smnc siiys. "It’s 
none of my business what he liclicves tir 
doesn't." So. jre all these lawyers minec- 
evsary? .-Vnyone can enter on Church 
ft ^ e tin Day? Tljis was a job foryour, 
faithful correspondent. 

— Suiliv.m-wus eager to-hdp-m\-cTperi.“- 
menc. He sent mean ACI.U hufk-tin. But 
he warned; “They migjit charge vou . 
more if you show up witli Uut." * 

To pu-h the envelope a bit farther. I 
— brmi ^Jit jinng a_lmneiin fp>m a witchc.s'^ 
coven in \V;idiinglon. "Wiiciies. U'iccans_ 
'and PagaiLs m the Dfstrfet of Columbia. " 
the front p.ige screams. Perfect. 

-Dff we went; .\fy wife played the role 
of .\CLU memlier; she figured I was’the 

o ne gett in g paid for this . 1 shou l d lie the 

, pagan._.-\nO in we wuncSb lur iJiu whole— . 
don. buhetias cheerfully accepted. .No 
questioas asked. The lawsuit continues. 

So do baseball. ChevTtilet and apple pie. • 


Preparing for a Grave New World 


I n recent months, the eyes 
of the world have ri^tiy - 
focus^ on the ihr^t to 
American interest and val- 
ues in the Ballams. Ar the 
suite ciinc, wc cannot afford a 
naoonol case of farsightedness 
Uia't precludes us from focusing on 
tlirvHts closer to home, such as the 
piiicntial danger of a chemical or 
' biological atta^ on U.S. soil 
Die United States now faces' 

. something of a superpower para- 
dux. pur supremacy in the con- 
t entional arena is prompting 
adversaries to scckXinconvcn- - 
lional, asymmetric means to 
strike our Achilles’ hccL At least 
- Ivcountries.-includinglran and — 
Nortji Korea, now have - or arc 
in the process of acquiring and 
develop^ -weapons of moss ’ 
destruction. Of particul^ con- . 
cent is the possible persistence in 
some foreign military arsenals of 
smallpox, the horrific infectious 
virus that decimated cntiio 
nations down the ages and 
against which the ^obal popula- 
tion is currently didensclcss. 

— “^Al^ looming is the chilnce that — 
these tenor t^pons will find 
their way into the hands of tndi- • 
-TidualsTtnd'tndependenri^ups' 

- fanatical terroi^ and reli- 
gious zealots lyyond qur bonlcnt,.,,, 
brooding loners and sclf-fHYv 
-daimedTipoeaJypticprophetrdt — 
home. 

This is not hyperbole. It is real- 
ity.hdccd,pastRuybqpr»- ■( 
loguc. In 1995 the Japanese ctdt - 
Aum Shinrikyo usM sarin gas in 
' its attack on the Tokyo subwpy."' 
and also planned to unlco^ 
anthrax against US. forces in 
"Japan. Those behind the 1993* 
World Trade Center bombing 
were also {^therin g theingredi - 
ents for a wcmiaJweapon that 
could have killed thousands. In ‘ 
—the past )oar. dozens of ihrrats to — 
use chemical or biological 
weapons in the United States 
have turned out to be hoaxes. 
Someday, one will be real 
What would that day look like? 


^ WiLLI/WI 

Comen 


cr they touch. 

The mardi of the contagion 
could accelerate asioundingly. 
with doctors offering little relief. 
Hospitals would become ware- 
houses for the dead and the 
dying A plague more monstrous 
than anything wc have experi- 

cn ccd.could spread with all the . 

— inwocabili ty of ink ontissuc — • 
paper. Andcnt scourges would 
quickly become modem ni^t- 
morcs. 

Welcome to the grave New 
World of terrorism - a world in 
which traditional notioiu of 
deterrence and counter-response 
no longer apply. Perpetrators 
may leave no postmark or return 
address - no tell-tale signs of a 
missile launc h, no residue of TNT. 
that can be, traced to a consmic- 
tion site, no rental truck receipts 
. .Ieadinfl40 ^ foolhardy cu^ims.- 
.In fact, their place of business 
may be a number of countries 
’—thararc conducting bloaigineer?" 
— ing under- th^guiseof-piuume— 
ceuticol research. PcniciUin for 
the poor, or cbob for the enemy? 
Who is to say, and with what 
deterrent is America left? 

Preparation'is itself a deter- 
rent- By minimizing the deatli 
and destruction would-bc terror- 
ists hope to spawn, wc rtducc the 
likelihood ihcjrwUJ even ny; Ycr ' 
a chei^cal or biological strike on 
American soil could quickly sur- 
~pas.s any' cbnimurul^s'abllity to 
cope. 

— Aspan of a federal interagency - - 
effort launched la.st year by 
President CUncon and led by the 
National Security Coun^ the 
Defense Department is doing i 
pan id prepare tl>c nation for the 


civilian autlioriry- ciihcr the 
beparunenTof Juaice-orihc ' ' 
Federal Emergency Management 
Agency. Second, an unequii-ocal 
and unamUguous chain of 
responsibili^, authority and 
accountability for that support 
must exist. 

Third, military assistance 
. should not come at the c^ipense 
of our primary missian - Halting 
and w-inning our nation's wars. A 
special Task Force for Qvil 
Support is being created to 
ensure that we have the militaiy 
assets necessary to help leqxnd 
domestically whOc «riti meeting 

our fo re most missioa 

rk-1 -Fourih,ourSiIitary response 


■ TainMsorSuiqeace: 
^■oaiedmPXi.aatSc&ZMi - 
(Ms. R> 83303: fMta cost - 


—Letter- 

Articie Aeb giniqg fao% 

Ibe in^iproprizae artxde dauri. 
JulyZOcoooe ming tfacEddaco- 
dent saddened me. I foood SI 


an ankle about tte speedeay. 
gossip was £sginsed as the meh 

IfindTbeTtmes-Xewshas 

sXMped to thelevel at 


efforts will be grounded priinari- Imenzet ftmctkwis -ixxmsfabar 
ly in the National Guard and quantity rxdes. 


iSfnJHE-BSBV-STOHE- 

^ For Ttte Unique-Baby— - . 

jfc 1| ^ Custom Furniture & Bedding 

■ ^^Oothirig'Sc .-VcTcessories 

^ Bab>' Decor 

Ora Tab.-Scr. lOoM • 5:30pm 
V 382 S. Esoe Rp. (Essu. ID) • 930-2933 > 


A D V A N T A G el 

an 


Reserve. In canirast to their 


Hie artidp CGocciss me zxs 



more familiar role of reiiifordng - just bcouse the “deceased dri- 

active-duty fo rces m-erscas, our ver" was my frisid box also 

guard and reserve ore the for- b eau s e she Irft behind a loriag 

word-dcplc^cd forees here at hndamdanddsildrBialsaHg 

home. Spei^ National Guard famth-imistiiowputtofxshcra 

Veanfs'dre being positioned om life witbow this ray of sm- 

aroundthenationtoadriseand shiiie.IsiucaclyxaaiBstiielass 


home. Spei^ National Guard famth-imistiiowputtofxshcra 

Veanfs'dre being positioned om life witbow this ray of sm- 

aroundthenationtoadriseand shine. I siuo«lyxaaiBS die loss 

assist coRimuniticsupin request. of Mrs. Kidd abo for it truly zca s 

FlnaByri^must noftraini^ ' axxagedy-'&omallffl^ia;. 
on American lives and Uberws Tbeaoiidewasdaodsuttsaad 

mthoru^e ofnr^^-ingihe i^ totally taased. The Tnaes-Xews 

rcarsabout the military’s role m basiwbusmessaxinitiagthe 
domi^c affairs are unfotmded, cither drnaofiiiiaikatiaec dun 
.as.ctidcncedlwalonghiaatyQf. . ..isfortbeaiabcaiucsatdihey 
reasona ble yndguv^asfulmiU . have tfieJacts-No oneia eatiar . 


laiy support to comnuniba rav- 
aged by natural disasters, such a: 
nre and flood. 

As in the past, any miliBuy 
support be preosely that - 

conadcratibns it. The 
Posse Comitatus Act and the 
Defens e Dq zarunenPs imple - _ 
mchtihg polices are~Sear ->'1110 
rotary .is not to condua dotnes- 
’’tic law oifo rceme nt withou t 
cx^dt stafuiory authority, anH 
wc strongly believe ho chutes 

—sliould be made to P o s se — 

Qimitaius. 

But merely managing the con- 
sequences of on attack is not shf- 
fldcnL Wc must be vi^lant in 
seeking to interdio and defeat 


srav- tvhide was wearing a seat beh. 

uchas .Thatisafaa.Wbatwacthe 

speed of both abides? HoirtSd 
T that COOK hno {day m this 


'fbe family of die ~<kceased 
drTvet^knoMthefaffizndcfae ■ 
facts bear out that h was a xiape 
--arTifVm.FjOTrooreirzpcistfae 
I^aicy left by a oiin& pasBOBZie 
wxxnaa who made a asaake. 


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222 Main Ave.S.\, 
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■ D;L. Evans‘B,ink 

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- 31H South Oneida 
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/ 2281 'Overland Avc. 

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For the record: Rcccnc 
acdvicy in 5 di Distria Court 
ini 'Rvin Falls County. 

Page B4 



IjE^ 


Inside 


Obiluaiies r. . . ,B2 

School violence is 

Milner roads B6 


Ci/y E/Zifor Kfi-in Ricfirri- 7.U-09M, I-lxt. 234 


The Timcs-iNcws 


Sunday, August 1, 1999 


Section B 


we re 


rmssmg-ar& 


-duelingbanjos 


this morning .there arc folks in 
Mahhattan and Costa Mesa, Boca Raton 
and Redmond - people who spend more 
on coffee in a day and you spend on 
beer in a month -whoVc dedded to find 
, youpredqus. 




Contests bring 



Team sorting event takes skill, some luck 


By Jennifer Sandmann 
Tlmes^ews writer 


• ~That’s bcdiusc you live in Twin Falls, 
Idaho, and just at the moment, you’re 
Ameriain Gothic. 

*Twln Falls, Idaho," the new, decided' 
ly weird independent movie ' 


put our little town once again in the the- 
saurus of popular culture as a ^onym 
for bizarre. 

It’s right there, 

“Deliverance.” 

. We’ve be^ down this nitted dirt road 
' before, of couisc. A quarter century ago, 
Evel Knlcvcl brought along an odd col-' " 
lecdon of hungover misfits from the Age 
of.Aquorius when he tried to jump the 
Snake River Canyon. Unfortunately, he 
] also brought Geraldo 
I Rivera. 

For a national tele- 
vision audience of 20 
million that Labor 
Day weekend In 1974, 
Twin Falls came off 
like Hooterville with 
biker babes. 

And it’s only going 
to get worse. Kurt 
Vonnegut’s 


JEROME - It can be done, 
blit it’s about as likely as getting 
a muddle of 10 numbered cows 
to cross a line in consecutive- 
order. 


die riders ami their horses suc- 
cessfully checked thc jiress. 
WJien the first anim al finally 
bolF- ■ 


: moving over the line, 
ing cow du-catening lo spoil die 
team’s effort turned out to lie 
nexriniinc-andnhtrridcnricrit' 


Saturday at the Jerome County 
Fair during about 40 attempts 
that for the most part saw 
between four and six cows move 
in-thc-righrorderrTheTcara — 
sorting.event was one of scvcnll 




over ivhcn cows No. 7 and No. 8 
broke free. It wasn’t clear 
which one would reach the line 
first, but No. 7 made it'hy a 
■^IDse-a^dThe^eam■gorbnckTO“7 
work. The trio’s luck held c 


a^vitids to brihg'Talr-w'cck to a to find tlie-next-two cows ready • — 


dose. . 


■- JlBreakfastl — 11 - of- 
Champions,." filmed 
here 18 months ago, is 
not going to be used 
by the Twin Falls 
Area Chamber of Commerce as promo- 
tional video anytime soon. 

. Look, the director, Alan Rudolph, is 
by all accounts a fine man and a rent- 
ed filmmaker, but we all know that nei- 
ther he nor Bruce Willis came to Twin 

Fi^ looking for Doble G'ii'*^ 

They came searching for; “Twin 


Pefkks," and according to- those who. 
hove seen ’’Breakfast of Cham pio ns," 
T h ejr hi rrhirj lie k pb t rTHcTHTy "t h I n g 


missing from the movie is The Log Lady. 
_Sfijy.O:6jeft.toj;ontempIate why.i 


d efiantly no nnd small.town in the mid-; 
~^Ie ofnowlierc attracts every UCLA 
film student with a fisheye lens and 
delusions of Sundance* 

There’s the canyon, .of.courso,-which- 
can look foreboding enough if it's film^ 
through a brown filter in August, but I 
suspect what mokes Twin Falls such a 
target-rich environment for Hollywood 
' is the folks who live behind the picket 
fences. 

Face inWelrenprctty guileless bunch- 
of spudmuffins, unashamed to shore our 
bumpkin folkways with a passing 
stranger and never pausing to consider 
how It’s gonna look in Entertainment 
Weeldy. . 

But shoot, we didn’t have to do nothin’ 
to get the Polish brothers to med^c in 
. our bidness: They picked the name of 
their movie - which is really about 


Nan* >1 MM HWUfi/n, 

Flagmen Wayne Webstar of RIar keeps a careful aye on numbered cattle Saturday morning at ilia Jerome County 
Pair, ready with a flag In cate the aortlnglaam lets a cow cress his line out ^ turn. 



Oeminge Egulllof of Cal dwell runs down a darting ioow Saturday during the team 
[ portlngcempattUMartbaJerofflaCoimtyfalr... •; -r- 


- quality saddle tlma with 
har dad, Johnny Urrvtla, 
.at.U!eJaroma_Coiurty_ 
Fair Saturday. 


It takes 0 little bit of skill 
and a lot of luck,” said Wendell 
Johnson, an ex-rancher, from 
Richfield who rode on one of 
the two teams that successfully 
moved all 10 cows. , 

Johnson joined teammates 
Ron Gotcocchea, of Ridhficld, 
and Ted Uhrig, of Shoshone. 
They had two minutes to sort 
and move the corvs fiom the far 
end of the rodeo arena 50 feet 
across a foul line. 

Goicoechca rode down the 
middle arid used his horse to. 
- pick apan’theherdiuntil hc.had ‘ 
the right cow ready to push 
•^cross the line. His approach— 
was imehse but quiet; riders 
don’t wont to send oil the cows 
boldng at once, because the go-’ 
round is over if a cow crosses 
out of turn. 

With Goicoechca down the 
middle, Uhrig and Johnson 
hung bode on either side of him. 
It’s a common s trateg y that 


to move in'the rlght order. 
With seconds remaining, they 
chased the final cow across the 
line'; ' 

7116 Richfield team of Dciwin 
and Tena Amy and Rod 
Hubsmiih also us^ skill to capi- - 
tolizc on its luck and be the ortly 
other team Saturday to move all 
10 cows in order. 

“You’ve got to be able to read 
and understand cattle,” said 
Marion Allen, an ex-rancher 
from Twin Foils. . 

Many members of the Magic 
Valley Team Sorting 


' Assodation, which holds_cvcnts. 

throu^out the summer; come 
_froni_nmdiing_backgrounds. he. 
said. 

Ranchers sort cattle for 
branding, marketing or wean- 


ing. 


Sorting teams play for prize 

jjy g 


allows teams to chcd< any cattle 


money generated by competi- 
tion entrance fees. The competi- 
tion is geared for both young 
and old ridei^ Bmydon Um itia.- 


bolting out of order or finish 
chasing the riglit cow over the 
-line-while-ihe-soriing-rider— 
moves for the next cow. 

A pack of five cows charged 


Saturday's j^ungest com- 
peiiior, participating in the 
event for. the first time in the 
.junior.div»sioni 


Tma-Newssutlfu}nter]ennif& 

luh<rlinc~when*GoleOMhefl*wpjir Sa ndm anr itm i bihv Bchaiitt733— 

after the team’s first cow, bu^ 093J. Ext. 241. 


Hailey animal shelter 
adopts ‘no-kill ’ policy 


l-8yBart>N«hirert- 


Tlm e» Wewi conwspondWTt 




Siamese twins ana me otg-aty nookcr 
they love - right off a map^ 

Yet I doubt there will be a single East 
. Coast art-house filmgoer who will not 
forever assodate “Twin Falls, Idaho" 
with some fly-sponed Maybetry out in 
the middle of one of those empty states. 

An obvious antidote to all this 
Gomcrlzadon of own town would be for 
us to become more hip, but that’s just 
another way of saying that we should 
embrace cj^cism. That’s too steep a 
price to pay. 

Instead,.! suggest we all moke it-a 

practice to tell strangers that the true 
Mother Lode of nirit^an weir^ess is 

just, down the road. . . . 

It works: Pve tried it riij«lf.'' • 

On the day. that Evel i^evel fell into 
the canyon 25 years 8go,-I-was-covering- 
th£. event for the Pocatello newspaper. 
— ■A^ewTnomcntrbeforc'the-jurapra' 
bunch of Hells Angels began tossing 
;'ni^ked Women Into the fcncra-off media 
compound. 

... 1 was standing next to a reporter/pho- 
to^pher from Dutch teledsion, who 
w^ long on dtilladon and short on local 
— lapwIe^.“The3e-Idahd-peoirfe3,-they- 
ore the biggest fun,” he exdi^ed,' his 
eyes the size of saucers. 

; “Oh, these girls aren’t from' around ' 

hue,” I deadponned. -“They come from 
Umh." 


HAILEY - A new no-kiU poli- 
cy, recently approved by the 
/uiimol Shdtor of Wood River 
Volicy. will give the shdeer time 
to find animals their rightful 
owner, or the right home. 

“Our dogs are safe and loved 
and cured for lor us long as u 


' Not the most words,' just the right, 
words: 


From the front page, of Wednesday’s 
edidon of USA'Todayi right hut to a 
— photo of a Kosovar refugee: 


- r-“MihancKerveshi,51,waitsforarela- 

ti ve to p ick her up at the bu s station . I 

TueiHay in HisHna, Kosovo. K^esHi 
was among the first gtoup of Kosovo 
A lban i ans repatriated from the Udted 
Statu now that the war is over. She Had 
. lived in Wlndfdls, Idaho.” 


•Tbnes-Ntwt feitum editor Steve Crump 
sure Jiqpe thera It not a movie in that 


takes CO get adopted," said shdter 
opemdons manager Nancy Smith. 

But this comes at a inice. The 
nonprofit shelter taps several 
sources for the S250,(XX) needed 
annually to run the operodon. 

Donations coippiisc a large 
percentage of the budget, but 
other money comes from pro- 
ceeds of the Barkin' Basement 
thrift shop, fund-raisers, license 
and impound fees, and the o-c- 
matorium. 

The shdter also relics qn a lot 
ofvoiunieerhaip. 

Volunteers such as DeEtcc 
Barney.'who brlngs elght gitls' 
hrom her summer day care each 
wepk tp..bru5h.and.wolk.the_ 
do^ Or a summer visitor hrom 
—Australia-who-volunteers- daily— 
to bath, brush, dean up or do 
whatever needs to be done to 
help. Or foster fom^es chat core 
for rccuperadng dogs and cats. 
Or youngsters >mo set up lemon- 
ade stands and donate their 
earnings 10 the shelter. 


lie primary goal of tha 
l-lAnlmal SbaKarofWood 
%r Rlv*er valley Is getting the: 
puUto Moduoed to dei 0 i swaBoble 
neradbpctonrAftiiuntBsra roudni^ ! 
waM doge si oommunlQ' events ' 
-sutti M Ks(iAtnAlM'0n-ni^ 
ev«ilna''eKi the KaBW teneie' 
'H)«iii.||UliuyeRi(iwiie. 


and neMeKl sthiMsBon en d s edeF , 
(tadaa!jiri;o(girit»d:Nhe ie hsud 
eaeh'ThunidiV hw" 'lO.VJh; .to 1 
. ^;^ St: Adorjie ^Quloh.’. neer 

.Vt^shlieie dio oih oMcft eel* 
e dsgfl^the «Mkshd,>erid tahe It 
cfoesoointv^Mkig-NNng, er out 
tor S'BWim:'Or^lur^ers een 


, ftWOM tg WHiettu r i 'CBB'W 
|;Shdy 


the Wood River shdter's budget, 
and can’t afford Co keep animals 
for long. Of (he 3,000 dogs 
. blMiSgflt- 


fewer than. a. quarter of them 
findhomes. - 

— ■Sick-of-destroying’so'many 
animals, Nichols said she wiU 
,soon leave her post and begin a 
new career. But she will remain 
a strong advowe of spaying and 
neutering, a msidon shared by 
. WoodRiversndtcrstnff. 

_ Ip.ordcc-tbJu;cp.tbc.animalt,_ 


The volunteer response has 
been phenomenal, said l^dic 
-Luray, -shelter board-vice presi- 
jJent ' 

~“We have idds coining to the 
shdier like jievu before,” Luray 
said. . pets for spaying and neutering. 

Ihe volunteers hdp the dght ."Without that, it’s alraos 


the Wood River shelter insists 
on spaying and neutering each 
ammo] berore' adoption. FVppies 
and Idctens.brou^ to tKc'snd- 
ter.wiU not be occepted unless 
the owner brings in the adult 


full-time and four part-time 
employees core for the dogs and 
cat^ which totaled 74 lost week. * 
In contrast, the Humane ' 
Society in Twin Falls.had'lT '' 
dogs Friday^The Twin Falls shd- 
ter Is obligated to hold onlmols- 
for just 48'hours before putting 
-them n> sleep.- 


hopdess," Luray said. 

“The only thing is, by not 
killing these dogs, they tmve'co 
be adopted," shdeer board merit- 
berAILuraysoid. 

Shelter .organizers don’t Just 
wait for prospective pet owners. 
A strong effort-is-madelo find 
proper huuies. 


“Wd had 22 puppies brought - When a dog or cat comes Into 
here in Ju^t.onc day, end they • the shdter it is evaluated for 
-dldn*t-Uv»-ta seethe -end of-thac — ^eraotional'-and'sodantydigths' 


day,” anlmol control officer 
Debbie Nidiols said 
The Humane Sodety operates 
OQ an annual budget of just over. 
$100,000, considenbly less than 


and weaknesses. StaH members 
or volunteers then worit to rlur- 
Cure the anlmaL Some dogs are 
taken-to- obedience classes, 
, PleoM sea 8H&7ER. Page S3 


lose^^^ spot on transplant list 

Kidney patient’s 


family looks for . 


To help 


housing options 


By Michael Joumee 
Tlmas-Nawf writar 


. isultable for gatUng Ricky 
.back on the Mdnaymt^ M 
can cel 6784211 tf 6793476. 


HEYBURN - He seems like a 
normal 12-ycor-old boy Who 
likes basketball and puppies, 
' ' g f o d u '-’ 


been in a fight with his own 
body his entire life. Now a new 
enemy has shown up in Ricky 
HoUohon’s battle forla normal 
life - his own home. 

Ricky has end-stoge kidney 
disease, a condition that is ter- 
minal without highly special- 
ized treatments. And since his 
own kidney has finally givdi up 
a long fight, Ricky is in desper- 
ate need of a transplant. But a 
buned sewer line ^ot flooded 
the basement of his Heyburn 
home several ycofs ogo has 
come back to haunt Rio^ and 
his famUy by jeopardizing the 


of row sewage in the basemenL 
Although Ricky can play a 
hearty gome of basketball out- 
side with his neighborhood bud- 


Janice that' she had too many 
blood vessels in her kidney 
making it a bad niaidi for. her 

_s9*L_And_n(tcc_hearing..about 

the mold situation at the 
Hollahan household, the doc- 
tors took Ricky off of the trans- 
plant list for fear that the infec- 
tion risk was too high and that 
•Ricky’s kidney-would- serve — 
another recipient better. 

“This whole thing has been a - 
mghtmiye." said Ricky's father. 


irritates the eyes and sinuses of 
his family - could kill him-with 
an infection in the open surgical 
wound he has in lus belly for 
dialysis treatments 
“He has to be on the dialysis 
machine for ten hours a day,” 
said Ricky’s mother, Janice, 
yrho spent a large port of her 
son’s life visiting doctors all 
over the region. Ricky docs tiis 
time on the blood filtering 
machine while he steeps a 

night.' ■ 

Ricky and his mother thought 
his lifelong ordeal was going to 
end this past November when 


Tim7 who was forced to stop 
working, at his tree trimming 
business after slipping on the 
basement stairs and hiuting his 
back while trying to get the 
sewage out of his home. “Wc 
just don’t know whnt wc can 
do.” 

Janice used to keep houses to 
bring in a little extra money, 
but with Jim’s back, she must 
be Ricky’sprimary caregiver. 

So with money tight, already, 

no medical. insurancoj-asido- 

from Medicaid, and mounting 
medical bills, the Hollahans arc 
getting desperate. 

“Our only opti ons arc to co m- 
pleiiily rip uui the Ui-slde <if iliu* 


ondancwlife. ^ surgery so Ricky could have hm,cp nnrf r/-ninr#. ..vFrv.,t.inF 

-Mold spores, oTesulr of the — one of his mother’s lddneys.'But ’ 

house since the day Ricky’s ot the University of Utah’s „ “l”.. 

father found two to three feet Renal Transplant Prograrn told 


ing at a family friend’s house 

Please sec HOME, Page G6 


Jerome to vote on $1.7 million bond issue 


By DUt-Thomw RMi* — - 
T1n>»»H»w» cofrwpoodent . 


JEROME - Residwts will go 
i.the polls Tuesday to cast th^ 
votes for or against a $1.7 mil- 
lion revenue bond issue which 
would finante Phase 3 of a dty 
water system master -plan 
tqigrade. 

. .'The bond , issue must be. 
approved by two-thirds of voters' 

to pass. _ ; 

H poss^ Phase 3 wQI replace 
older four- and Six-inch cast Iron 
. with about 23;400 linear 
i feet of 8-. ’l(Vvl2-. and 14- lnch 
|~?VC pipe along areas in'thc 
' northeast and southwest sec- 



I- — minute-wate r f 1ow;”'said'City~~ 


Fire Chief Jim AuClair. “At 
some places in the city system 
wc arc as low as 700 giulons per 
' minute.” , ' _ 

City Administrator Jon.Cccil 
' has a display in his office of 
water pipes ^at were recently 
dug up._The interiors_ofjho_ 
pipes arc corroded H-ith ri!- - • 
nearly closed off . • 

Four years ago, Forsgrci,. un 
en^neeiing firm-in Boise, was 
contracted to design a master 
plan for Jerome's water systemi 
Larry-Evons, an engineer with 


streets, and sections of West D 
ondWestBrtreets.,.. 

Phase 3 would olso install 30' 
to 40 new fire hydrants to bring 
fire protection up to code. IS ... 

deadend lines would be loope d ■ ■ F orsgen. has been wor king with 

to eliminate diwces of siOgiwt -the-clty to upgrade the water 
. or contaminated drinking water. - system since the study was com’- 
.tionsoUhe,ciiy,jn)e.target.maB_^_CIiy_Engiaeee^cott.Bybee — pletedJrbis.wimer,XvaiisjvilL 
includes Tiger Drive from East ^ said this project is not aimed ot update the plan to incorporate 

20th to East Main, a portion of future growth but rather to 

East Seventh, some of North - bring the current system-up to 
Lincoln, all of East and West I standard. 

streets, portions of South Davis, “The'State fire' code regula- 

East E, East F, and east H tions require 1,500 gallons per 


. growth on South Lincoln and 
make projections based oil 
exi^M future growth In that 


Please see JEROME, Page B7 


‘V 



U TtaeMlm.TateU.iMM Sotaiy.AivU1.2ar99 


Services 


-Hospitals- 


'^«ndcU. friends may call from 5 to 7 p.m. Twib Norris IIollc of Twin Foils. 

Demaray’s-Gooding graveside service at 10 a.i 


Xtootfay m the Wc«leD Cemet^^ Chapel and at 10 aan. before the Tuesday at Sunset Memorial Park 
- S-^i =» jhej:hj.rcjL;__injryvjtuF^ calL 

55“^, l^emaray s Wendell ^ ^ ' , , ' from 4 to 8 p.m. M«?nday at While 

Stella Osetrem- of Rupert. 2 p.fri. Mortuarv. • ' 


Stella Osetnnv of Rupert, 2 p.fri. Mortuary. • ' 

— ^ Mnntiay at Hanteft-Mowuary , ' 

Tamera ^amniy" B. Mcfrer of Rupert Chapel; friends may call Albert A. Schell of Rupert, li 
Jerome. 11 a.m. Xlonday at the one hour before the service a.m. Wednesday at St- Nicholas 
Jerome 6th Ward Stake Center; Monday at the mortuary. . Catliolic Church in Rupert. 


Twila Norris Halle of Twin Falls. 

graveside service at 10 a.m. . - MEDIOVL CENT^ . ._ 
Tuesday at Sunset Memorial Pork Some names are omittcd at 

jnjrjyiiuFallsiJricnds-may enii paoents request. 

from 4 to 8 p.m. M«?nday at White .. . 



Obituaries- 


“*y hdonnatJon. cafl 733^0931. Ert. 278. between 2 p.m. and 5 p.m. Monday ttirout^i Saturday. 

• te 430 PA tor next-day pebflc at fa n . Death notice* are o free »ervlce and con be placed until S p.A every dty. 

Srie was a member ol Iho' Buhl She altondod school in Burley and 
.. First Bodlsi Church. Edilh enjoyed -had .wondorlul stortos of-bomn a— 
her IriQnds. lamily, fishing, nand siudcnl in a orw room schoolhouso 
work, gardening and (lowers She mot Goorgo Pullman at a movie 

: Shejs survived by her husband, theatar lighting over an armrasi. - 
Dillord, daughter, Dorothy They wore marned January 12 
(George) Juker, boih ol Buhl, a son. 1947, and resided tn Kimberly lor 
William -Gene' (Priscilla) Bolton of Iho next 52 years and were com- 
-Ptier;-e-3i5ten-Mary-eit?abom— moniyknown'as“'Tno’Danccf'‘.* ■ 


AdmiHi*d ■ 

Helen Fnllic nf Tu;i«->?aUe;_. 

Tony Basile of Wendell; nhd 
James Jeffries of Shoshone. 

Released 

Richard Stone and Jsy Welch, 
both of Twin Fulls. _ 

_CASS!A REGIONAL MEDICAL 


Admitted 

-Ashley-Aldridge and Shelley - 
Miles, both of Rupert; Linda 
-'Nava of Burley; Lano Ellson 
Malta; William Ramsey of 
Heybum; and Gladys Tuttle of 
—Albion: - — 

Released i 

Wtlla Adams; — Desiree — 

Calderon, Chandler Kramer, n 
Michael Monteith and Ray I 


REVERSE MORTGAGE 

If TOU ARE 62 OR OU»X; 

NO REQUIREMENT TO REPAT, AS XiONG AS 
YOU ARE UVINC PCYOOR HMEf 

Call CHIJCIC BYLER 

SiS NORWEST MOBXGA<^ 

1201 ftIkAve. L *11 l-SOO-^TSSl 


Ldstiry 'Memories 


Personalized Urns for oo 
pets, so it^ey may follov. -s : 

1B0? D:-.=' :• 

T.mii rsi:? U 

734-5016 


E.-nmen of^Twin Falls; 8 grandchil- whorover music was playing Lucy Calderon, Chandler Kramer, 

dren. and 17 grcat grandchildron. lost hot dancing partner last Michael Monteith and Ray 

was precedod in death by 2 December. Hopefully st>o has lound — Zollinger, aU of Burley; Rosario 

° I"™ “OS'" •>!»;»»> . Rodriguez of Rupert; and Icnho 

Uki^. CaM.. and Jamos.Grgyboal Luev will bo mmf'mnofwt r^r Soara&of-Namefr— 

01 Forest Grove. Oregon; and an the groat cafoand iirnogKfCT opurgtMH-wampa: 

infant grandson. MicftaafOoiion. many friends. and (amity Shewas • 

The luneral will be hold Tuesday always eager to oiwo a heiplno t> u- 

at 10 a m. at the Buhl First Baptist hand. Wo vwil miss her ofeatlv “ Bobres were bom to Shelley 

rh.ift-h ..-.ih iu.li... . — . and Todd Miles of Rupert; and 


ChUfch with burial following at Lucy is survived bv live dauoh- “4 Todd Milos of R 
-ScrtsprPamn-Tw:rrFan?-puDfrc TerS7Rdsb~T Jbo ~ W SBaoT o rtS? ^ ^ — | — landa Navmrf-BQrtcyr 


Vir^H. Lesher 


I 


Virgil H (Jack) Lesner. age 95. of Quick Response Unit 
Twin F.^;is. Idaho, died oi natural 
causes on Juv 30. i»9. a: Desert t'rv rnr-nr xr 

Rose RetirerTK-r'.; E^tQ • IvIivinKRLl 

. — Vrrgil Lesner was Dorr> on — 

Seplembcr 27. 1903. m Mitchell 
County. Kansas, a Horry a.rd Mary 
Lesher He rr.arrie3 Arrue Lauric 
Emmo! on October 23. 1925. m 
Belort. Kansas, and they rri^ed to 
Twin Falls. Idaho, rn 1938 Jack 
owned and operated Twm Fans 
Auio Pans from 1940 ts Apr! 1996. 
first on Kenberty Road ard laav on 
Addison V7est. Amc oeo ^ April 
•— - 1.-197-4 He iaier_ma . *rio a Cera~ 

■ Pelerson/Hcpt>6 *h Janm»y tOfl'i " 

She d ied on Oceemnor i, 199Q _ 

■jack-nao beer' very active in me 
Twm Falls cernmunity and the ' 

GidOOns over me >«ars he Irrcd m 
Twin Falls. He was a cftancr mem. 


viewing will be hold on Monday Junction. CO. Pat 'Eldon* Moyer ol 
bom toam io7pm wiihihofami- Twin Falls. Carol Harper ol 
ly greeting Wends from 5 lo 7 p m. L'afayotlo.- OR: Kathy ■Michael* 
Memorials are suggested lo the Branchflowcr ol Wondoirand Cindy 
Buhl First Baptist Chutph or Buhl Pullman/JuanOicagaoieoiso- two 
Quick Response Unit • • ' sons. Howard *Bov* Pullman ol ' 


Earns woith Mortuary^ 

- J--N- _J- E- R-O .M. Eu 

lMai}y Oemtd and Opmifd at IS4S Stturi Um*lMSattf 


Dor and e^der errentos at Valley 
Chtistian Crviri in 7wn FaTs 
Virgil Lesher rs survived by his' 
son, Tomrrry G Lesher cf QkJanerrsa 



Nampa and Kevin 'Rcnea* Pulirnan 
ol Wdnaichcc. WA; is grandchil- 
dren; and 15 grcai-grandchildrcn 
Sho was proccdod in doatn by her 
loving husband.-Goorgo. and ono 
daugnicr. Barbara Harmaman. 

A funeral Mass will bo cclobraied 
ai^.m Tuesdw. August 3. 1999. 
of Reynolds Funeral Chapel. 
Friends may calf on Tuesday itotn 
1 1 a m until 2 30 p.m. at Ro^ds 
Chapol. Inicrmoni will follow in Twin 
Falls Ccmeiery. Tho family suggests 
memorial contfibuilons to the- 
:iAmorican7Cancer~SocietYrbfo— 
Reynolds Funeral Chapel, P.6 Box 
_tldZ.Twin Falls. ID 8:^ 

■King Hill 

James (Jim] Diaz 
Montgomery 

Jamos (Jim) Diaz Montgomery. 


_ MlNn>OKA MEMORIAL 
~ HOSPITAT 
Seme names have been omit- 
ted at patient’s requesL 

Admitted 

Sallie Vega and Jane 
■ Henschied, boih-of Burley; arid 
Billy Ray of Heybum. 

Released 

. . Eleanor Durfec of Dedo; Billy 
Ray of Heyburn; and Jane 
Henschied of Burley. 

Births 

A son was bom to Andy and 


Srr vioc AH Faitit All CffBflfries 
*■ WhA KxrrpJietial Seri'Ur. Carr et Valwc. 


ij^re-funefeef 
C^tinerdf D^fdiis 


MORTUARY 

BURLEY CHAPEL 
- 678-2521 



- Notices - 


THESE^SRETFME FAC3K 
BEHIND OUR NAME . 


»u.i. u kuw cr u«jarTcrr«i ~ pw. . w»"r uiu4 ivionmomery. mnJllA FAntlhr 

City, a foster daughter. Sharon Berg Cfyde F. Foogway Jr. 85, of King HIf.Oiod Friday. July 30. w .,. „ . 

ol Pemsyi/ana. Sa/ grahOcnitcren. ciyce Frankim Rioowav Jr 79 ol fiimoro Medical Cenior FALLS - Mollic Fender, 

— MyrA-T ^ -iy . eur r ept/ ; Au.i.^ - i i - K - m e ei'i y. wi i to htyfamViri heav-— ^ ^ -86. ot Twm Fails,. djc.dJriday.- 

Henderson, Nevada. Drcv,ousiy a on Fnoay. July 30, .1999 at Si Memorial service will bo hold at July^, 1999. ' 

20-year resiooni of Jerome and Aiphonsus Regional Medical' Cenicr ' TDufsday. August 5. I999. ' . A graveside service will be 

' TttyF a vs ? i L L osh o r — ift-B aise .-elrerea nu rtnitr n. 's ;. at-Jho— Siurioau— Comoioty_lr> Hekl-at-l-p.m.— Tu c^ay nt S uiue t 


Moitte Fender 

TWIN FALLS - Mollic Fender. 
86. ol Twin Fails, . die.d jriday, — 


of Curnbc-fiarsd. V-ar/tand. Dena.’0 Ho was bom June 20 1920 in S'uhoau. Arrangomenis are under 
G Lesher ,ol Sotngcrcck. Illinois. Kaw City, Oklahoma to Civoo of Summers Funeral 

^d Pair«li A Lesher rtOnennaa, Frankim Ridgway Sr and Meilv McMuriroy Chapel in 

- O tW : - o r<o Wi g togg ^ j. rjsu rg-Jm- V1ora^8^ff6’Tl7tfgvia7~Flo~camo Home. • 

and Trm Srr,a'>w9Cd. W aassen. he Idaho m 1935 wiih his parents „ was^rn March )4. I914. in 

I has nine gteai-grandcfti'dron (and brotncf ano sisier Me lirsi lived iri Valley. Idaho, to Albert e* u c- 

ofvj on mo way) Ja» was precce- tnc Lemni vaiiey of Idaho whore ho ^®'s^afi Morngomery and Cora Mepnen bpeers . 

©dinoeambyrisfwowivtjs. Annie ranched wun his lamer and oroiher. Agnes Tuitt^eTh© family moved to-. TWIN FALLS - Steohen^ 

and Cora, his son. Jackie H • Don fiiogway The lanlily then • Ideho. whoft Jim was an Speers 8$ of Twin Falls died 

Lesher. ar^'aii ci hs crecrers and moved to ihe Magic Valley and J'lr as a cowboy in S-j"' *'3!" 1999? 

■s««s--— ’ - farmed south ol Jerome. Ho mar- Cixnty for iro " ®“y* 

The funeral service *•.- ce con- ned Eathel Bevans ai Jerome in w'fb his iwo.broihors owned Bndgeview Estates in. Twin 
ducted by me Goechs and w'f take t945. they were married lor 26 operated a ranch at. , 

place at 11 arn cn Monday, yeirs before divofonfl They had V/ickahonoy In iho early i9S0s. he Arrangcmcnis arc pendmg and 
Augusi 2, 1999. at Va-'ey Christian lour children. Laura Bay ol Back 10 Bruncau and went will be onnounced by Porke’s 

— Churcr.— ;?4>8-MeyOu«rvftyen u g— S e avmiui l , OR . C v niriTd~fTerrv)~*®'**^.**'*®^‘*^~^~^°"Chrwhcrc-ho Magic-Valley -Funrrnl'Homc'in — 

East, win a s-nyi tyaKis-O} serves Proseon ol Kimborly Pailv (Steve) '®'^aincd until no and his brothers Twin Falls, 

at Twin Falls Cemstery Tne family Gorreil ol Jerome and Glenn bought a ranch souih o( King Hill in ‘ 

suggests mc*Ti:r.aixns;cut.cns 00 (JoOeen) Riogway ol Powell Bulio .’9®’ I'’ 1975. ho.movod loahomo Rnma Wli^islna 

given to Gidoers :-temsi‘craf, Twn OR He married LaVma Janousok oi *<‘"0 Hilt whore ho resided until . .. '. 

^ Be* 67i. 7v/.n Mountan Home who preceded him fi'S 0C3fh. WISE - Rema Wiggins, 73, of 


Memorial Park in Twin Falls. 
Friends may call from 9 a.m. until 
noon Tuesdoy at White Mortuary 
— I n TwiffTalls: — ^ — 


Wc arc people iosi Bx yoD 
with a doitr to Btc and nisc 
our £un£ir in ldabo.Ylws it tni 
a coqwntc bosexLbia &mir 

sen-kc ai a £rir prifx with no 
' Stmmicis.xre arc firoa kUio. 

yoiir »itb the «%nin- 
and respea tfaarmipoald 
onta-ourown. 


. PAKKFS , 
MAGIC mi£?i 
niNEKALHOME 

25S1 tontoh taalTM M.'' 


MUfr. CaibrriMe6'EUzab0i>na1» 


735-0011 


Fails.- :0 conj».su. in death. He married -Mavi Jill) — --J‘h'-*S survived by a nie 

rions leri^A-tn Reynaios Foster ol Payeiie. ihcy later separat- *wo 



ed and divorced, but remained life- Willard (Butch) 

tong friends Montgomery ol Virginia and Robert ' 


■oved. being a cowboy. Ihoir rnoihor. Pally Montgomery of 

He is survived by his four chil- - Home: and a.vcry close 

dren from his first marriage, and two Chorl Ash of King 

■very special slepchildren, MaryAnn r!' • oroceded in death by 

Cricket (tec) Hawkins ol Hawkins ™s Parents, two brothers, one sister 
Basm and Jim (Judy) Foster ol 3™3noDhow. 

Weiser; eight grarxlchiidron; eight 

great-grandchridron, and his*sister. lERDAfE 

Laura Belle (Howard) Bevans. Ho ' ' 

"u Marian L. Wellhausen ■ 


Jim.is survivod by a niece, .Sue— - -^isc.dicdTriday-July.30,-1999. — 
yrd of Kimborly; two nro2<- An^gements are pending and 

3P^ows. Willard (Butch) will be announced by the Farmer 
lia and Robert ■ Funeral Chopcl in Buhl. 


ents, and three brolhers. Harold 


IW>«;cy), Jamos (Don) ario irtira o' 

oreff-jir; Ralpfi. Thursday. Jufy 


~EiStirBalton~.lulii~ ^ ^ ^ 

Edith Bci:on Julm, 04. of Buni 
died Thursday. jJy 29. 1999. a: c-e 
Twin Faiis C^iinc and Hsspiai aher 
many couragocus years of Ca.'ting 
rteah disease ar^oabetes ' 

She was born Jore-J— »915. ,n 

_Londori. Kentucky, a daugrucr of 
Laganna L ano Ada Bell Cbx 
Graybeai At the ago of 14. she 
.moved. w.m h<g tarrjry to Kimagr ty 
where she graduated from hign 
school-tfr 1333. On.Secterricf 6.,. 

— 1-934-; She -anp-John BotTan' o T " 

Casileford were’married in El»o. 

Nevada John died in t984 On 
March 29. 1991. she marned 
Clifford Arnold Ji/n. a sietxne fnerd 
from Shevim. Minnesota. As a 
tee»»ager. £(Mh worked at cteanmg - 
and cooking tor families in 
. Kimberly. Alter oraduation. she 
mended tor the Iw-in Pass County - 
Hospital Viffde hcipr» u ratse her 
I two Chridren on the* ftrm in Buhl. Iiww* A Dullm»n 
she rnilkiM cows ar>d worked in the 

-np i i54-~AHw — r-*-»py~’^"h~Pu»hiatn— 72— oh 

she worked for G>e^ &^. 

• Shorty's Markci. Df. Atwood. Dr Friday July 3 0. 1 999. In an 

'Torirfappen for a yeWs. Lmcoin ~®*7pedcstnarraaMenr 
Courts. Buhl Senior Cinrens as • Soptoniber 1 1. 

assistant manager. rciit(r>g at the daughter 

agoofeo. -of Robert and Clara ,Joyco.Kldd, . 


Clyde, take ’em on up to iho p* hor homoln Jommo. 
'upccrBasrure.'weTTsee you whon"“;r®*^"“-*P,"-p*®‘’® 
we net there ’ Paughlor ol Julius and Carolyn 

Scfvces will bo conducied at II J®hse’n Neumann at Twin Falls, 
am Tmsoay. Augus; 3. IMS. ai 

the Hove-Robcrison Funeral Chapol r,^, TOrnod 

in Jerome Friends may call at Ihe Wo^hausen on Ctetober 26. * 

chaoei Monday evening from 6 

•pm-umitepfTr- CnufCh.in_Twin.F^ls..ThC5v.farmod-. 


; m^imb.cfiyJor_a.itrro,.incn.iQ,i954:_ 
•she and Melvm moved lo RichliCid 
(arming ihoro until Melvin's death in 
May Of 1989 Marian later moved to 
Jerome in 1990. 

Sho is survived by ono daughter. 
Anti.(Mi)u}} Larson of Jerome: ono 
son, James Wellhausen ol Waldo. 
OH: her grandchildron, Richard 
.{Tracy)-L-arsen,-Rayniona-Larse'rT:^ — 
Rhonda Larsen and Rochelle 
Wellhausen; throe sIstcisrMargarci 
■TEdMnl'Brone'and.lrene (f^num) 
Warr. boih ol Muriaugh. and Lovila 
-(Rev, -Martin) Hemicke of-Boi9e.-She" 
was procodod in death by her par- 
ents: 

Services will bo conducted at 10 
a.m, Monday. August 2. 1999, at SL 
Pauls Lulhoran Church In Jerome 
with the Rev. Baldwin Camin-oflici— - - 
oiing. No viewing is planned. 
Donations may bo made In 
Marian's name to Kosice Visions. 
1300 Kimborly Road, Twin Falls, 
Idaho 63301. Services are under ' 
the 'difoctiorr of (ho Hove-Robensorf ~ ~ 


y. See thfrOryjDeL Bell ~ 

B7; .. 


Dr. B.V. 'Burt' Holcomb 

BURLEY - Dr. B.V. “Burt" 
Holcomb. 83. of Burley, died 
Fridoy, July 30, 1999, at the 
Parke View Coro and 
Rehabilitation Center in Burley. 

A memorial service will be 
held at 11 o.m. Tliursday at the 
Burley United Methodist Church, 
27ih and Almo, with the Rev. Al 
Thrachcl officiating. A private 
iniermcnt will take place at the 
— Pleosam 'View-Gemetery“in~ 
Burley. Arrimgements arc under 
the direction of Poyne Mortuary 
inBurley. .. . 

Ruth F. Wallington 

— JEROMB-r^- — Ruth — Faye— 
—WollingtQnrSSrof-Northfield; — 
Minn., and formerly of Jerome, 
died Fridoy, July 30, 2999. 

A memorial service is pending 
and will be announced at a later 
dote. . , 


(Jn<t/fly c- ( o/i/fH/ssioiuih 

% t 


S \ 




I 



_ wnice we p ro ii d t. 


' Paul A RoacKTA' Rctaiolos • Joax Htaa 
TaSNT^STItepSON— : Faew-Coecwi aw m 

Eleynoias^Watf 

. 2466 Addison Av8. E.-*-Twin Falls • 733>4900 — 


prop em we sell “P eace of MimJ 



Councr)r sotting south of 8urley,.4... 
bedrooms, 2 baths. 2 fireplaces. ' 
Private back)rard. • 


_^Ve got the sobnori 3 bedtoasBkZ badi 
- home art l33ao». 5B40S4.fc.tadBar -- 
---oma wM ITnals fius2l7Da;.fcsitafcL 


On^5^ 








• I ^Xikc PO M gracdmotfcers. 

l < ^ Sicaya3 UBtJ e Mtia o<f»-' 
juM die way things arc. So. 
WKa ste i« a » a< Jed th e. Mt 
' T ?)bri’Te and roeJattK diau' ihat 

fmsm wTtfi hrr ng a* tlt^i 


^ *RB hiiwl ef bewildend wbea 
it bappcnedL* she sad. "I tB^*t 
fdjaacd OD 9«Eg tt the radeo tfot. 


■ To select die Crandon Queen 
«sacb Tear, the £iir board sifts 
i tuumJi letters srrmen by rd»- 
tiles aud'triefids'of Uisudo^a ~ 
Cononr’s grandmothers, lelliog I 
si^ their nooincc is ibiejsra I 


nmoimi »l work nvudcd ii> put Ivadcrsandyouihaliki.-.’ 
toRcthvr a fair. McCall said that “This offurs kids a chancv i<' 
Milhmii voltmtcvrs, it would be boiid self«Metsii and rct^PQhdt 
itnp(K<ablL‘ ic> orcaniza the annual ly. U'c know the cools and purnov 


• BK - SeSe aa:> «ntiM k 


~Bcgg se lect e d Airin g the Caal I iMf 

iBgfat cf the fair's fi miiiiit-s last < ' • 

year grres Rot^ is d ie honor of beaudhiDy modest yard. In addi- 
presidxiig orer 1999's renion, (iaa n taoing their own Idds, the 
sriiicii begins t oom i um at the Rodgers hare had several foster 
SCnidofca Cocary Fairgroonds children in their home over the 
soih a &Q week of a e riii De s rang- year — so many it’s hard for her 

iag feaa qidi shows nl atakioe come op with a number off the top 

traODrpn&tDmDdveOeybaQaiid ofherbeadL - _ 

fee cnmijiiiiimii Thetfaeneof The active 68>year*old still 
: AH vear”s £air is “Cheers for spends a lot her time helping her 
h mhand Wayne in the fields and 


: Tod^ instead of 

haw elea her A vme pwa w w fry 


“Wayne loves' the fann, I love 


naktang or car tacm K . Rodgez^ the Ea^“ she said looking out 
— sthrildeis filed twamir wfttt "thewindOTrardiebri^irsonshigc*' 

mg ore of her aging mot h er . Par- on the fields acres the road from 

aciissdes and lentSeg roses in her ifa an awhil lot of hard wo^ for . 


Shelter 


the money you get. But that’s Just 
the way it is - weloveit" 

The couple first met in 1947 
when Dorothy came to Rupert (or 
a while to visit with a minister 
cousin who lived here. They were 
married the next year. 

Rodgers fim became involved 
with the Minidoka Fair, through 4- 
H when her children were small. 
And although she isn’t as active 
with the fair as she once was. 
Rodgcis soil enters a few items - 
.ziikc hcrroscs orpcchaps'some:!: 
knitted item - every year. But 
—she mode^ydownpliiys licr ubili — 
ty HI (h such things. 


to be adopted, but mixed breeds 


. white others are itfenri fied.as fknith said about 20 percent of can be even more rewarding for 
■ ^ - Jn i i^t pafioeihui^dop.. the dogs brought to shelters arc petOH-ners. 

**•**?“■ “ i ts pu rebreds. an d peop le have a ' “T ime k not .nn .■I .mwmt for «»• 

Cn- A We b^siie to matke f its am- ^eat txiterest in acquiring pure- animals as long as they are physi- 

sacs. It VwmM be on li ne in the bRds.Thesedogsinay.be the first ^cally and cmodonally fit," Smith 


t M • 4 »W.4pM r> M ROT 

OCk (tWM m tiMnCiI 


“I’m not a crafty kind of per- 
son.’’ she said. “I put a few quilts 
together cs-ery now and then. But. 
not fancy ones, mostly just for. the 
kids.” 

Saittrday win he Rodger^ ktst ni^ 
as 1997s Grandma Quusv wiicn .she 
will sec another grandmother st in 
' ihcroddngdiairtjopity. 

“I teally warn to say thank you 
for the Ian year.” she said. “Being I 

pan of the fair like litis was a veo’ I 

nice honor. Tlionk you.” ' 

Times-iYctes Mwi-Gusnu Durvau 
-Chief -Michael-Journn^can-bc~ 
nudwU in Burky at 677~t042. 


said’ “Tlic dock is not licJcitig on 
ai^ of <nir animals.” 


“This is a total volunteer 
effort," .McCall said. “Even the 
fair board members arc apjwini- 
cd by the City Coundl as vblun* 
— teer-iHwithww ." ' ' 

_ McCall said one of the fair 
boanl’s ptim. tty goal s i s to org a- _ 
hize'ovents iliat HnO'app^ to a 
wide variety of interests while 
keeping costs to a minimum. 

“tliis is really a family event," 
she said. “This is one community 
cs-ent that, no qiaiier your walk of 
-life or wlioydu ure^you cun lie 
involved. We don't even have a 
gate dtarge." 

4-M Club leader Tia Mullins of 
Oakley helped the 4-11 Kountry 
' Kriiiers prepare their booth for 
this year’s fair. No stranger to 
volunteer work, she is a recent 
recipient of the Distinguished 
Atvard for Service given by the 


Jeny Motddd. who bedped his 
daughters with their 4-H Qub 
booth, shares' Mullin's feelings 

ilh the f9ir and the. 4-H Club 
projects that are such a bte part 
o{ it. .Mo^iHd'alS'He unjenvihe . 
chance to be involved with the 
' fair and his daughter's projects. 

“Tltis teaches them a hit about 
responsibility. Our kids have to 
buy ihdr own feed and make sure 
limonimalsget fed.”besaid. . . 

“It is fun working with these ' 

' kids,” Moi^cld sai± “It is funm* 
watch^ them with ihdr animals 
- 1 think it's the best enicrtain- 


Times-Ncvs correspondent Dex 
Dutson can be reached in Buritv aj 
67W570. 



BISHOPS PAINTING 


a N, 

Quality 


Commercial • Resideritial 
New Work • Repaints 
ality work at a Reasonable^Pricd 


I SERVING ALL OF IDAHO 


438-8637 


See our New “Yea i^ ^OO tl" .Mod els 

. , ^ . .. ..... 

Meet Our New Management Team 




Owner-, MLconsUer-tellineJmme-andS- 
acres. Call Kathleen Hawkins. ^98-00743 


THIS ENCHANTING HOME 


Spacious home on .65 acre. Includes 1200 
sq. ft. shop. 2 car garage, fruil trees, gar- 
■den-spotj-Andemon-windowsr-Anderson- 
french doors and back slider. Will hat'e 
new roof prior to closing. Call Kathleen 
Hawkins H99-00275 



On the Snake River is rustic, elegant and 
solar energy efficient. Beautiful, setting. 
Call Kathleen Hawkins. H99-000I9 


n ^ 

“ MiLS 


- Curtis Realiy 

Residential Division 
678-1751 
1 - 888 - 224-3435 


An Indopondontly Owned and Opomtod Member Broker of Coldwoll Banker 


Ihia adui Bujiial 17 

~ BftOM/NAMUSOiPfrS CARW /AL _____ 

“ western'jaaboree ~ 

LEE ANN WOMACK 7 rw-9 n* 

SugcFrotu^ $l6«Gninditend;SI4 
BtcaehmrSlO 

(Spoftiorcd tv Cauta County F«libo«fd. Pcpii. KAT 
KOUNTRY) 

Concen Tkk<ls ovsiLaUe at Fair Oltloc.Conal Wnt. 

nr^TocoBandilo * - 

WaiaaaiT Hug— I IS 

— PARADE lOrSOyoi — 

r^aradc Maitholbr.GCTokI & Cvdte Marchanr: — 


paw ard^'m'loryUvbuldyHtk^SS 
TEAM SORTING 7 iw 
S25 Entiy Pur Man, 

Hiw i iij a uBiial l> 

BROWN AMUSOIENTS CARNIVAL 
Kjds Day ITS 6 PM AS day pais imtlmlicd ' 
tides $8 - Ai)cs 13 & Under 

CYMKHANAJ.rM.-.ajN- _ 

. HYPNOTIST - JACK HART 
4;00pm' 6;0Opm 

PJLCA. RODEO- - 

~ KIDS-fREE IN BLEACHERS 
- \CAli: SCRAMBLE AGES 10 12 ‘ 

WOO COW RIDE 
Local follies - L30 
IVtrful Muyual20 

BROWN AMUSEMENTS CARNIVAL 
DUTCH. OVEN COOK-OFF - 
Aadglngai 12rM-*amnln- . —• 


— HORSE RAONCItw— — — - 

HYPNOTIST - JACK HART 

2:00 4^00 m-&0DrM 

PJLC.A. RODEO • FAMILY NIGHT 
GrandUand Rewrwd 
-2 Adults. 3 Kids $18 

WILD COW RIDE 

Local Entries : $30 


BROWN AMtiSEMENIS CARNIVAL 
, ..FAT STOCK SALE 9 AM 

HORSE RACING 1 pm 

Adutts$2.50. 

~ PJLCA. RODEO • QUE^ CROWNED 

Queen's Saddle spomored by D.L.Evans 
& Cassia County Fairboaid 
WILD COW RIDE' 

Local Entrles-$30 



‘ FUN FOR EVeny ONE'ATTHE FAIR! - 

4-H.*.HOMEECONOMICS-3k-PROOUC£.*ART 

•FtOWEBSirU VeS TdCK TTFOOD BOOTHS‘*'FREF; 
ENTERTAINMENT * COMMERCIAL.DISPLAYS 







■ ■frl^ Tlriw ■lil t . Tiiififc: Mite 


! Magic Valley 


FURNITURE 


TIMC-IS RUNNING OUT^ 
~ you MUST ACT NOW! 




HEBE ARE JUST A FEW EXAMPLES: 













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■ ^ ’ L'lv^ 'angsS 

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POOR CO] 










■^p— ^ ^ . V • - • Sund4J)f, Aucuit 1, 1399 Tlma^Newt, Twin fall», Idaho B-5 

jCjoyemor s committee on school violence prepares to start work 


: BOISE (AP)-OnMay20,Cov. 

: pirk Kcm pihom c appnintf.pl ;h tt 

jformer dean of ihe Co1|crc of 
•Education at Boise State 
.University to Icad a study into 

; in schools, 

• More than two months later - 
; wiUj^even Confess, at its typical- 
ly dclibt^tivc 
pace, having 
conflucted -,a 

-number of 

hearings on 
the issue > the 
membership of 

n - Idaho’s blue* - 

.'.ribbon.commii- 

tee has yet to 
bc'announced. 

The presi* 

Writ Keni pthome dent s of t he 

state's leading L 
teacher and par ent or ganiz ations h 

~^«re unawlire thWXciripihome h 

hod even proposed the panel. 

!And its chairman, nationally m- 
oeoized childrcn>at-risk expert 
Robert Barr. remains H 


■rtty.SinleiciDftoOte a&Aot 
ttteseonsidertog seated to ' 


' tVr«»«Mhi. (-"Hth u for So what can a governor’s blue- 

. la\\7nnkcrs arc ieluctnnt even to 

□ : IMqrinKteoliMl1ctiua.au. !;''P "il'i.sch.UI building needs 
urinaU.nduril«.Kte«al,l.. 

Terr iSpes Keup.l.orne will 

■ . provide "very dear, crisp direc- 

^govii^iaMUuUJ Pwgy* ^ doiLabouLivhaLliiLivoiddJiJ^ 


<»***,*a»i>ii««i«Muc™u, I 

n rimiutilfcihr — mstotata and update school cIsJs . 

^sdiooi.MCt^ and crisis prepared- n ; oiuaA — Bwimnw 


geanxl to boam tnuTb^ su^^dn- 
tendered prindpds. elRled cortimu 
nity ofllciato and c«her ponQMnta 
Craoto wd taiMct a swie-t^. 
•atfi^stfWycente rfoierieasB' 
ntoouce on school satoty. sacutly, 
crisis praperedness andreiatod 
Issues. ! 


dilemma for which experts say said Kenneth Trumpjjiresidem 

So what c-an a governor's blue- NiUtonaj 'School Safety anti 
ribbon committee hope to accom- Security Semces, He told a U.S. 

lawTnakcrs'arc reluctant even to the Columbine tragedy that a bal- 
help with school building needs ancu between preYeniioii, -inter- 
because it might compromise vcniion, security and crisis pre- 
local control? parednevs is needed to effective- 

, Barr, hopes Kcmpihornc will ly combat school violence, 


However, he agrees with 
~Tdahn*)rrnnRr{?srinnanif’ti7r.nrlrin“ 
- and most Idaho residents - tli.ii 
more restrictions tin gmi sales 

answer. ‘Jile problem is moii.- 
complex than tfiai, ami so are the 
answers. "I'liey involve not only 


such M school oecurtty egolpmem 
and dMlopmsht of crisis prepare 
' ness gutoeilnssl 
Qt^tnoitltepravent^ 

^ — ileB a nd Bi teinatIve p rttt ni i is foret-^ 

. risk and deOnquent youth. 

' Hw totofriat address for Trump's 
Clevelandtased consulting flmi Is - ' 
— wMVJehoolescurtty.org. H 


,he_was app ointing Rnrr m ^p.».ir. .-An .-..nfiriiite 
head Jd^o’s assessment of possi- to ensure our communities ore 

bio solutions on the same day a safe," Idaho Educotion 

l&ycarKild boy in Conyers, Ga., Association President Robin 
shot and wounded six students at Ncttinganid. 

Heritag e High ScfaooL Yet she aclmowled; 

emor. 


to work on.” But Morley said the' I 
committee should expect no such 
specific guidance. ■ 

"We’re all acting under the_ I 
premise, of course, tliat the locali- * 
“rierarD-the’key'phiycrsliere';’’ — ■ 
the former Ca&sia County school* I 
superintendent said. "What we " 
want to do is make sure there ■ 
“isn’rsomeihlnRthtrsranrcouldTJo — ■' 
to assistlocnliiics." I 

Ban* said'hcTind'Morlcyhave — s' 

tried to fasltion a committee tltat I 
represents a croru-section of the I 
education, law enforcement and * 
criminal justice communities. 


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■Home 


Continued from B1 - 

with Ricky-siiice returning from . 
treatment in Salt Like City. “My 
miiin cnncerq-is.to. get so me- 
phiee lie can stay.” • • 


rently beyond the Hollahan's 
means. Janice has been search- 
ing for a rental house in tiie area 
ami has even gone to the Idaho 
Housing Authority, hm with no 
luck. And completely renovating 
their current Iioine i.s not an ' 
j)pju)n they c an afford. She .sa y.s 
any kind bniousing tJmt wmild 
put Ricky in a healthy utmos-- 
phere and take the pressure off 
of friends who have given up a 
bedroom In their own home for 


Janice and Kicky is sorely need- 
ed. - - 

Janice .said that while in Salt 
. Like CityL-fOrliiSitrcatmcms, she„ 
-nnd.Ricky staySd nr the Ronald 
— Mc-DoTTTtid-HoD5irr'vhich"prd^ 
vides apartment.s at no charge 
for child patients and one family 
member while they undergo 
treatments for any numlicrof , 
serious ailments. 

. "Thcyjvc. been wonderful," . 
Janice' said of the staff at the 
Ronald Mcndtinld House, “They 
told. me I con come back with 
Kick and stay, if need he, biit he . 
wants to be home with his 
friends,” 

Although Kicky, with his 


sweaty, dirty &ll-boy face, looks 
- thc-pietur« of licorth'ot first 
'glance, a peek' under his'shintail 
. ond.a Jicavy gau^wrap-around- 
his middle rev ca l__t h e sur gi Vnl 
opening ifThtTafidomon and the 
tube through which his blood 
must be filtcred 'coch ev'enirig. 
The opening leads directly into 
the peritoneal cavity, which is 
the' area doctors fear will 
become infected if be stbys at- 
the family's home. 

-! “T hat_kid can sinhd n l/« 
pain,** Janico said with an 
uneasy smile as she watched 
her boy. “Sometimes he won't 
tgll you he’s hurting because 
ho's been to the docto^M much,_ 




I — ^stny-on*lhe^dlalysis-machmc— 


team watting over him not ' 
budge on the transplant option 
until his home environment is 
not risky. But even if Ricky 
<muld get back on the transplant 
list now, it could take os long as 
two years to actually find a prop- • • 
tr donor and undergo the trans- 

- plant. : — 

“So without a place to srayrwe — 
really have no options right now ' 
except to go back to Salt Lake 
and leave Ricky's friends and 
father behind^" said Jani ce. . 


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MagicTalLey 


Suntfar, Aucint 1. 1999 Tlmss^ov*. Twin Falli. Idaho B-7 


BLM to create roads in Milner Recreation Area 


E 


Obituary 


John T. Huddy 
T1mo»Now» %wttof . 


I4_ — LKURF.RT ^ 



L ; , : : ^1 rRT.RY-^Ift-an-^fon-to-pro- 

maVrlod -Mafnaroi Roboris injSUanta. better access into the Mihwr 

TSoofflia. Ho was on iron worker, ' RecreaUon-Arca, ihu~Bureuu oT 


RecreaUon'iAl'ca, ihe"Bureuu“oT“ 
workfno on iho Bonnoviile 6am! . tjind Management will be creai- 
-Goldon Goto Sildgo, Bilimoro Hotel . ^tig road entrances into several 
In Los Angolos, Golll.. and holpod campsites during the next 45 
build |ho Santa. Anila Raco Track. days. 

Ho was an avid outdoors man, lovod Blaine Newman, the BLM out- 
to hunt big horn shoop, and rocky door rcoeation planner, said sev- 
??°L® CTal campground sites will bo 

closed off to vehicle traffic start- 

_own-horso.»Jor-paradoe-and-other — MonjaV ' Perch — Pmn? — 

_cofomonio5. Ho rodoJn iho-Roso j ’ 

Bowl Parade, and the Oranno Show Cedar 

Parado In San Bernardino, Calil. Ho Pomt, Trout Point, Bass toy and 


Point, Trout Point, Bass toy and 
loved to run, being iho lirst man to Boss Point wiU_bo_closcd off to 
break Iho <1 minute milo. Ho was a vehrcle access. 

-member ol the Masonic Lodge In Newman said a total distance 
San Bernardino. of between and 2.6 miles wili 

Ho is survived by his sons, Dolborl be worked on. There were only 
and Ernost Boll, both ol Rupert; and pathways and no actually roads 
his .sisters, Alta Dayloy of Long leading Into the sites previously. 

TlllOtgOn ol Twin Fails, Idaho. Throe whh n prnvr«1 «iirfnrA nH/tnrI hn 

'granacniiaron'flnd76ur'groairflraTdr---r^d 

Childfon also SUfVivp him. Ho was N«wmnn enld Wnifnr, TnA n 
profioded in doath by his parents, . r ’ “ 

his wilo, two bfoihors and five sis- building contractor from 
lOfs. Heybum^i^ to^wrldng on the 


: Orville E. Bell *' 

_ OrvDlQ E. BntI Ol.vAftr.nt^ Punoft. . ....II 1. - - 


-r^eni dtod Thursday. July 29. od at 11 .a.m. Tueeday. Au„ 

®f.y«i^l'.-W 8 iaiAssi, 8 i 9 d Llving^ ^99, ai Hanson Mortuary l^upori. cost 

.ceniar. . . , • Chapel. Burial will -take place ai a ..•Thenowroadswi 

- Ha was born January iO, 1908. in later date In Desert Lawn Park., ler for year round 
.Hagemtan. Idaho, the son ol William Callmosa. Cailfomla. Arrangemenia to the recreation i 

.. ;E'..dnd.LIJi[e.Rule.Boll^jiayJaier— Bre.under-U]a.dicociion.oi-Hanean— —said 

. attandad school In Hopowoll, Ho Moriuary Rupori Cnapol. “During the win 

l-Jerome 

. ^ revamping the dry’s water system Still, some resid 

I i^hase 1 Of the water system withPhase3. dry definitely nee 

; completed, last _!£. passed, the $1.7 bond issue to-upgrodc'its w 

mduded the new water will be financed through a loan However, theyM 

■ “Sireet and the distnbu- from the State of Idaho Drinking done without too m 

Water Revolving Loon Fund. The taxpayers. 

>^|pion^nd was financed throu^ loan will cost 4 percent interest- “They have to 

I'S* . ^°°bo Department of with no penalty for early payoff,' — Anclla R<»^ a sci 

S 'lmmerce block grant said Greg Mlsbach, an engineer ing on a fixed incon 

and a revenue bond financed with the Twin Falls field office of leave those old crus 

rough the United States the Division of Environmental 
sportment of Agriculture’s Quality. 

r.-T?*^.'5?npnrlam-funddnian«lczzzriheapainvmTj£fe^d;^ 

■ *brough SSincreaseto-thcdtywaicruSfer’s ‘ inveslmenl 

.•jexistir^waterrates. base rate, raising the user’s ' | *ha 

a;_ Pha se 2jif th^mostcr plan monthly from fu tn tn y ? tne Mo ney 

recently completerfas part of Some residents think it’s In The Time 
3he downtown revitalization pro- worth paying a bigger water bill 
ect It induded water lines to on each month while others wonder 
1-block area of central dowmown if they can afford 1 l 

nd was also fi n a nce d through an - Margaret Kennison and her- 
daho State Department of adult daughter, Anna, share a 
immcrce Block Grant home on West Ave. G In Jerome. 

Phase 4 is expected to be com- Althou^ Kennison Js not yet of 
leted sometime in the future and retirement age, her poor health • 

'ould cost abour$l77Tnlllloir prcvenlsTief from wWking fulP" ( 

base 4 would replace outdated time. She’s diabetic and suffered a ^ 


Comments . 

.• gfywihavquMtlcni'ofcotn- 

• BManagomorn's MHncr Recreation 
' ' Ana rood praject call Blaine - 
. Newman, outdoor planner for (ho 
' BLM at 678^514. 


and creates a dirty and muddy 
me^” Newman, said. “The con- 
struction will improve year round 

access for vis i tors." 

Motorists frequently get siuck 
in muddy nits in the recreation 
area during the winter. Access 
into the sites will be easigr-for 
visitors after ihc project is fin- 
ished. but will siill depend on die 
weather, Bill Rice, a BLM cn^r 
necr said. 

. "Tlie construction will make all 


or fish. cle fee for day use and 55 

“People can still camp at the oveniiglit fee will not lil- ch^ed 
various site:!, ihcyjust can’t drive during the cohsiruction dates. 

■ 'into dieiu,’' Newmfih said^-‘lWe’re-^s ^ 

going to make every ef fort to rt mtsA'cu-s sttt/f wriur John T 
open' tlie boat riimpS on the Ifiiuhlu can Ik nvehed in liurlcn ai 
weekends thniigli." 677-4042 or by fwoiV ’ ur 

Nctvman said tile usu.il $3 vchi- }huddy<^inu);icvaUcii.cotn. ' 


Qunliiy Producl.*; S Best Prices 
Toll Ffoo: 1-877-220-3305 


leading Into t he sit es previ^s^. existing.spurs.(campgroundiites)- 

The'P’ithways'wiirbe widened useable. Not all of.ihem ore use- 
witli.a.gravcLsurface.addcd,.hc — able oU tho time ri^it now, ’’-Rico 
said. “Access inio the sites will be 
easier when tlic weather permits 
of course. But it will still be a 
whole lot cosier chan how it used 




how much the construction will ' Newman said while the 

cosL entnmco.woys into the sites will 

^Thencwroadswlllmakeireas-. . be closed off, Muskrat Bend, the 
ler for ^ear round use by visitors moln recreation entrance, will 

to ^e rcoeotion area, Newman be open. Visitors can camo-BL— 
-said. ■ Tlfu«ratBend~or”hlk«} over to 

“During the winter, frost melts ’ one of.thcL other sites and camp. 



Still, some residents think the 
dry definitely needs to continue 
to-upgradc' its. water-system; - 
However, they’d like to sec it -, 
done without too much cost to the 
taxpayers. 

“They have to do it,” said 
' Artclla Rosen, a senior dtizen liv- 
ing on a fixed income. “They can’t 
leave those old cnisty pipes in the 

”iKeeR_track:of.your.:.j. 

■ investments with ■ 

the Mo ney pages 

in The fimes-News ■ 


dty. Phase 5 would cost about 
$1.5 million and would build a 
>mt(m tower on the south end of 

“When Vro'stnrteTlifiis project 
our years ago the water pressure 
very low,” Evans 

One water tank and a number 
distribution lines later, the dty_ 


She tries to moke ends meet by 
working parT-dme at Target and 
babysitt^ Daughter Anna works 
-riaTrdcriotcthtrJeromeiSdn^^ 
Statibhjfnd at Ridlt^’s. It takes 
four Jobs for the two women to 
cover their bills. They don't have a 
lot of extras. 

“Where am I going to get the 
jnoney for gn increase inuny, 
water bill?” Kennison asked. 


BBSSbbbhiibSBSS 

gBSgssggsssSiS 


ground. It’s just a matter of who 
pays for it Can thev get a govern- 
ment grant or will we be stuck 
' with the bill? I hate to sec my 
■ water bill go up.” 

Times-News correspondent Dixie 
Thomas Rcale can be reached in 
Javmeat 324-36^0. 


rAskAdHound 
to search our 
Classifieds 
for you. 


Tell AdHound what yo u're looking 

"fbTa'nd fie'U search to find a match. 

Then he emaiii the od to you. 

He con roam right here at home, or 

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newspapers nationally. 

For more Infomatlon, oU 73M931. 


ake it worlTliafcnfor you 
... and your heirs. 

J oin US for oi ir thr ee-part estate planning seminar; 

Building Future 

— D*rvrlo|>it»g-the-Bluc|>pinl^Aijf;-l’6riW9 

Property ownership, titling of accounts, the 
probate process and transfer on death. 

Construction - Scpi. 27, 1999 

Wills, living trusts, durable powers of. 

attorney and health care directives. 

Adfling the Finishing Touches - Nov. 29, 1999 
Gifting, trust taxation, irrevocable life 
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trusts. 

■ To leam If theaa oamlnare are right for you, or to 
make resorvatlons , pl eato' contact . _ 

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Can you see the future? 

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TWIN FALLS - A suable crowd filled 
Magic t^alluy Speedway's grandstands 
^ S aturday to sec the retu rn of the Cactus 
Fetes Intcrmountarn 

favorite was Burley dri- exaJlajt, 
ver Clint Kidd, who ,, 
returned for his first oxalaacar 
race following a tragic 

June post-race aca- . — 

dent on Idaho Highway totitefu. ' 

50 that claimed the life * 
of his wife, Diana.' 

Kidd maneuve red hi s n inr — 

way inlnd out of traffi(r^ 

to finish an amating Ki dd 

^hlrd^ftar^tartingtihe 

race in Uic 13th position. ' 

“Wc had an excellent, excellent cir out 
here tonight,” Kidd said from inside the 
rainbow-colored No. 88. 

”It was an awesome night and (the race) 
would have been ours if we hadn't run out 
of time.” 

Nineteen' of thc-Pro Stock-class racers 


Aa WatsfS raaids ima — olOwMi^r IMcy Spaodaij miHiadtogttrCactai Pete's Saper-Stock^ln bsat A Saturday night priof to the main 
met. Waten Intfs the itaiAO ^ Ms yea's sapor stodo. 

Pro Slock racers on Lap VL That wreck Sdxrade picked up where he'd left off. worried about his brakes. 


^Navigating among the stadium 
V is'not unlike driving in one of the 
city's vast traffic jams. But 
. 1_1 because you’re there, you go with . 
•::r the flow or puU.aslde until a lane ■- 
; opens. 

• Once I wound my way up and 
I around the numerous horizontal 
^ ud vertical concourses to the sec* 

.* ond of four levels where my deket 
. said to be, gazing diagonally and 
; across the vast park was t^y a 

-■ breathtaking sight. 

> ^ . Beyond the lush, green outfield 
' 2 and cut diamond arc some 47,000 i 

; stadium seats and 69 luxury- | 
*' — 7T«iyerTei'iiwwg“dT5oipsnn 

- scoreboards, walkways and evoca- I 
1 tive angclar arrangements. A I 


tion-T V ui - r ee n dominates-high 
above cent er field. ' 

Electronics bombard you from 
seemingly every angle. Among 
the plethora of visual displays 
indude Nintendo 64 game sys- 
tems placed surreptitiously about 
the stadium and some 600 TVs 
(bat broadcast the BQtne from 
stratcgic'pojncs such as conces- 
sion and souvenir stands, smoking 
areas and restrooms. 

'My whirlwind tour of the boll 
pvl^tx>ok-mo4o places-previously 
hidden from the pedestrian view 
No space is wasted, yet the feel 
ing of comfon rci^ as the ultra 
wide main concourse traverses 
the half-mile router 
— \VharI dlscovered-wasan artsy- 
plaza that stepped down to the 
sets of train tracks outside the 
park, while a kids’ play 


nizens.— 
and bat- 
l-stands'- 
: design 
iicld Icvd 
the stands 
facing the 
‘ long nor- I 
four-inch I 
view holes I 


would have been ours if we hadn’t run out Pro Stock racers oa Lap LL Tbaz wreck Sdxrade picked up where_ he'd left off, 

of time.” required the liansei Fire Pe panm ea m but for only three Ups, as the red No. 37 of 

Nineteen' of thc-Pro Stock-dass racers go 1°^ aoiaa as a snail fire bad oupc^ Joe Hood, of Elko. Nev. commandeered 

took to the track for their 50-lap romp underneath ibe oilpan of driver Fred tbe lead from Sdxrade out of Turn 3 and 

around the 1 /3-mile oval and as . Walker. n ev er looked back, runixing to his second 

cxdtcmcnt soon followed in the uitrafasi Once tbe fiamet were eitinguiihrxt and se aso n win. 

fidd. ndng r esimed , tbe So. 34 fabdt iimj i i ii e Hood, who had to steer through numcr- 

Thrcc restarts under two yellow flags rf B oratettn <kis restarts, 10 laps under caution and 

occuiTcd within the first laps, with his lead with the original field of 19 ointag a nxn^p sprint to the finish over 

the biggest wipeout tndudihg seven of die already whittled cknen to 13 css. points leader Jim Waters and Kidd, was 

Out-of-stater is top tater 

Wyoming man wins Spudman Triathlon 

By Matt Petewon , 

Tln>ea4(ewa writer Rc SO ft S — C2 


but for only three Ups, as the red No. 37 of "Those restarts made the brakes get 
Joe Hood, of Elko, Nev. commandeered . real hot,” said Hood, 
tbe lead from Sdxrade out of Turn 3 and “As soon as Td come back and run a few 

n ev er looked back, runixing to his s eco nd laps the brakes would come back to me. 
season win. Under caution, I didn’t have any brakes 

Hood, who had to steer through numcr- hardly at olL But it was good to be here.'” 








Taylcr »rwt t-^ in of tfairdpfaoe fin- 
isher and defending champ Aaron E. 
OUn Olsen's rime 1^^ w» * nine- 
secood improvement over last year's win- 

_ningnxDe. „ 

"It was abota tbe ame rime 1 efid bast 
year, so 1 feel pretty good about tbat," 
Olsen said. "Jason is a good friend of 
mxne,!^ ^ad to t«tn ytax it. That was 

an awesome rime.*' 

On the women's side. 38ycar-old Kaxhy 
Rc^nnsod at SaA Lake City overpowered 


than 10 mnrutes Robinson exited the 
tn third pUce, but pedaled past the field to 
.establish a sizable lead entering the final 
leg. Fnxn there, Robinson ran three min- 
- ozes faacr than her xiearest.com p^tor. 
and onxsed to her first Spudman title, a 
race she tUd never before entered. 

Rotnnsoo's winning time was four min- 
utes faster than that turned in by last 
. year's champion, Amy. &LThomquist. 

"I had a great race today.” Robinson 


it in and push it the whole run." 

In team competition, the overall men’s 
...title went to the trio of Jim Rcnal^, Tcny 
Patterson and Mike Nielsen who were the 
. .only ^uad.to break the two-hour barrier, 
finishing in 1:53:55.' 

The team of Nathalie Chevrean, Sylvia 
Kunz and Karissa Neff captured the over- 
all women's tide in 2:12:12, while the com- , 
, bined team victory went to Nate 
Vorwaller, Paul Williams and Becky 
Burnett who finished in 1:58:20. 


Racing older teammates pays off for Siin Valley’s Hdwy 


[Snake River Summer Championship 


TWIN FALLS - Six first-pUce 
medals at the third annual Siulfe 
River Summer Championships 
don’t lie. 

Translation: you can’t i^ue 
with Michelle Lowry’s training 
tactics. - 

.'“"1 race some of iiiy 'oldo* team'- 
mates in practice,” Lowiy, 12, 
said Saturday after posting a 
three-length win'inliec favorite' 
event, the 200-ixictcr individual 
~medley.~”That kcei» membdvat- 

Lowry, who enters 7th grade 
this foil and has swam competi- 
tively, since age 5, duels her 
SV5B swim team elders often 
during her 2.5 hours of daily 
workouts. And often, she beats 
tlu^ 

After a few more of the early 
moni!iig.sessioni^'sbeH acxxxnpa- 
ny one of those teammates to 
Grand Junction, Colo., site of this 
year's prestigieus zones postsea- ' 

son s wu mneec = . ' 

' Lowry, who also qualified is .. 
1997, and Sun Valley 14-yeardld 
Mo^ Paricer are two of cnly four 
area youths to post times fast 


I- 431pLjn. 
i Attni ssl onistee. 

CQOugb to qualify.m 1999. 

The third and fooitb locals 
heading~to Colorado'XB'siid^ 
August are-Magyc VaO^ Simfios 
- Jake CamdL 14, and Janes' 
K^ila, 12, wfaoK b&tss« 
Sanxrday in the 11-U SD- 
meter backstroke l)utiglu fain a 
dot. 

Carroll cjoalificd last seasaa 
but did not attend due to time^ 
rrmonint< WOO*t this 

year. After coogntnla* 


Car roll said after the. race. 
"When I tfaiofc on it, it’s the last 


are already tec ”My Limily wdl 
ride dom imythev , TH ride 
witfatfae ( s oo es ) team.* 

The OXeary Jonior High 
Sc h o ol stn fcnt ended the nee^s 


~isb-tB flwt rf tii» tn#*i^4a4a — 

ZOOtneter Ueaa ttr c ke -cneotf 

bresist streke b vnd^ tegvdBd 
as a difficult event ID nasBec. 

”lt wipes ne out totally." 


Co go pitsoett aD tbe_w^ to tbe 


*^si^ly Tte~Eke cunxb aD die 
way up to. my szontech wh^ 
fiabh,** be said. "That’s why I 
B> weak on { 

!»* * *< to work on streamliniiig, 
tiwigit tbe water. I need 
to work on osing my whole 
body.” 

Swimming 60 rapid-fire 100- 
meter sprints m praoke - one of 
1 £hGbs ooadi Fiank Debooey's 
favorite training drills •> has 
he^wd tl e i dj uy tbe Biggie Valley 

*^Emfiu iu'rim day, Cuiiull 
teammate Casey Tncker. 14, 
staged an cntcrtaxnittg show in 
the neb’s 400me<er incCridial 
medley. Tbe iwai went down to 
the wire, bat Tbeker's s up er i or 


distance freestyle stroke through 
_ — tbc-final-half-lenctfa-ef-t he-pool— 

"Everybody, I mean every- 
body, jumped up to watch,” 
Defaoney said "It was the race of 
the day. In the 200 IM, Jake’s 
gexina spank him. But Cas^ just 
had a Iktle more (energy) left in. 

z th e 400.” _ _ 

T Tucl^ also pEked third'm'the 
e 13>f4%en*s 200-meier freestyle 
-' and 200-meter backstroke. 

other events, Marlin 
Gregor y HoUon was edged out 
e of the top spot in tbe ^lO.men's 
_ ~200-met e r freej tyle-on a late 
surge from Caldwell’s Grant 
Rosandick. HoUon finished sec- ' 
ond in the 200-mecer individual 
medley, and.thlrd in the 50* ■ 

.meter.backstroke. . . J 

KUiona Palatini niod to a sec- — 
ond-place finish behind . 
Pocatello’s Alex Brown, who . 
f raked in three more golds- - 
s Saturday to match Lowry's total 
r of six doough two days of finals, 

while Elena Louder, 10, collected 
1 — ~SiI(f%fTdThT^TO"wOBaoX'S(F— 
, meter backstroke. A pair of 
1 BCarlins raced to second and 
t third in the 11-12 woments 100- 

> cfrr%t^ 

r For Sun Valley. CaUey Brown 


finished third in the 9-TO 
— womeh*r20(^ me r ef f re es ry l e-and— 
--Aumn BuUer earned- sUvor. in 
the 9-10 men’s lOO-mclcr breast 
stroke. . - 

In all, ten i)cw pool records 
were sec before the sun sank 
Saturday evening 

^Cwerthe pool updke 

‘For every car sold thb week- 
end. Latham Motors has pledged. _ 
$20Q toward.the SSOO.OOPjirpject . 
, to weatherize the dry pool. -The 
goal was 150 ears.- Through- 
^nuday evening, according to 
project coordinator Stephanie 
Crumrine, a total of 131 had 
been sold. Nineteen more today, 
add -the goal Is met. Also, an 
anonymous donor has pledged 
"$50 for evciy first,'$2S. for every. . 
sMond and SIO for erary third 
tbe Marlins/^rner during this ■- 
wericemt^cbmpedtioa' - _ 

rimes-A/eics sportswri ter Jeff, 
Rosen can be reached at 733^)931, ■ 


Please see SWM. Page C3 





C-2 .T1bw»w»w». Twin Fillt, li 


Knight Riddof Nows Sofvico 


lamps prepare tor Australian showdown with Chargers ! 


GREELEY, Colo. - All it takes is a 
pa.ssport. and you’re in; 

. If customs-offidals-in-Aufiiralia- 
- required just a little entrance exam • 
'.Miy, “Can you mime tliree-people from— 
our country?” • the Bronco's’ charter 
■ plane would refuel and turn riftlit back 
around. 


The Bronco.s have passports. But they 
• Imvc no idea what they’re geitinR ima . 

. .‘.‘Isn’t .Arnold. .Schwarzenegger.. 
Australian?” receiver Shawn Turner 


.Bowl exhibitiort Rame aRuinst San Diego. “Hey>ve been to the Outback.” Maa 
Vyhen they arrive 1 uesday - not only, do Taniivasa said. Finally, someone with 
visitors to Australia have to-deai with- .. knowledge und rcspccr of the placet' 
the confusion of having their water drain., they visit. The Outback is the vast 
■la-lhe opjwsiie-tnrection.-but-thcyHose — rxmratnea'arertirtlie'c cnter of tlie ' coun- 
an entin;.day getting there • they won'r try.- 

know anyone ^cre.-- - ^ _afo. 4,e restaurant In Denver.” 

Drtvid DiaZ'Infantc; Three ’ Lcnnic Friedman went to Duke. He 
Aasirulinns? OK, wail, ilierc’s Crocodile wants to go to medical school He is 
Dundee, ilie Gator Chaser (that would sm.in. 

l>e tile Crocodile Hunter), and ... “I know Justin and his wife," he said. 


Ooh. Close. He’s Austrian. 

Turner will get in anyway, 
rhe Broncos leave Sunday for 
.Australia and next Saturday's American 


.Mark Schlereih; Oh, the guy who 

. punts for San Diego. . 

Diaz-Infnnic: Yeah, Sun Diego. 

— Sciilareih: Yeah, that one dude. 

Diaz-Infunic: Bentley, ^nt _. ^>mley. 
Something like that. ■ 

The lerm-Ugly. American comes to 
mind. . 


I’ardon? 

“Justin and his wife. They used to 
come to my parent’s summer camp.” 

— We kind of meant famous Anstniliafis. — 
“Oh, OK. Crocodile Dundee, the guy 
from ’Crocodile Hunter,’ and 


Americans: Pee-Wee Herman, the guy 
from Mutual of Omaha’s Wild Kingdom. 
undTh'ctKih.s. 

Did we -s.'iv he w e nt t o Duke? 

Friedman shouldn’t f6cl too h.iH. Billy 
IVlilJcr should. 

He thought about it for 30 seconds. 
“When 1 Kas watching the X Games, 
there were Australians,” the receiver 
said. Tltat was ills full answer. 

Only one Bronco, out of more than a 
dozen, could name three Australians. 
Tony Beni named Darren Bennett (San 
Diego’s punter), Paul Hogan (Crocodile 


Nicole Kidman, which icUs us they really* j 
have been concentrating on football the- « 
pastweek. V .« 


“Foster’s. Foster’s aiTd Foster’s," Re . 
sJiid. . ' ■ -..’i' 

And Foster’s first name? - . - 

“Efetcrr” ’ ’■ " 

Schlcrcth: You know what 1 heard . 
about Australia? 

Reporter Who Should Know Better i 
TVhat’s tliat? 

Schlereth: A lot of Australians down 

ilierc. I don't know for sure, but that’s 


from 'Crocodile Hunter,’ and 

Alxirigines.’’ . 

Hiai’s akin to n.'iming ihrec famou.s 


“Dundec)and-Snjvc Irwin'fthc Crocodilc wharl heard. : r- — 

Hunicr). You know what I heard? That you no, 

Some players came up with Mel longer need a passport to get imo^., 

Gibson, Olivia Ncwton-Jolin.-Grcg- Australia. Go ahead and Icavc-tbcm at 

Norman and Luc Longlcy. No one got -home. ■•.i.’- 


Scores and stats 


- — Bashdai.i. 


AL boi Kores 
RCOMZ 6.YANKESS 
WMI9K tosrm 


UM 



POOR' 
















Sunday. Auguti 1. 1999 Tlmoo^ewt, Twin Fallt. Idaho C-3 • 


SpOR'I'S 


Pair of first-timers make winnep’s circle ^Sports in brief 


By Kevin Hall 

- - Tlm—^ewi writer 

TWIN FALLS - The NAPA Auto Parts Pony 
stocks and Budweiser Street stocks warmed 
up an already hot track for the spcdal appcac- 
ance of the Intcrmoumain- Super stocks at 
htogieV^ey Speedway-., _ _ 

But Pony sto^ driver Gene Goodiaiow and 

Street stock driv er Thnnins P nwplLdMn'c need— 

the practice, as they both promptly came out 
and ron away with their first season main- 
event viaorics. 

_ Powell's Camaro nabs yvinner's circle 

Jcramcc Coates motored out to the early 
lead but Gooding’s Powcl) proved to be the 
best car on the night, driving away with his 

first mata event win in almo st two seasons. 

■'*Thc (CShTdro)' was a rodtet, “’Powell said, 
pounding the roof of his car in victory. “I 
thought u'was fast last week, but mon, this 
week 1 could drive it anywhere I wanted to,- 
anytime 1 wanted to.” 

Powell look advontogc of the slaw-nOinlng 
Willie Dalton which tied up Cootes and 
opened u hole tor tne savvy mecnamc irbffl~ 
Gooding. From there, Powell charged out to a 

conv incing five- second advantage over the 

pack of Coates, Noman KaUce and Jeffrey 
Meads, who were dcadlod<cd and fighting for 
second place. .... 

-Through 20 of the 35 Japs, it was still Powell 
— wayutut In front-bya-huge-lead-ovcrUie-neld — 
with lap traffic spread out and holding the sec- 
ond place runners back from catching Powell. 

It quickly turned into a race for second with 
~~thc experience bflfatkc showing as the veter- 
an eventually grabbed second all alone. 

The race stayed pat with Powell, Hatkc, 
Meads, Coates and Don VanSchoiack'round- 
ing out the top five through the 30-lap mark. 
But with two laps to go, Dtilc Miles, running in 
the borrowed No. 42 car of Ron Pierce, dis- 
played his own track moxic by passing Brian 
Wdeh to claim the sixth-place finish. 


Auto racing:-- 


Goodfellow wins first race . 

Virgin driver Casey Pchrson followed by 
Fred Marlof spuh out on die first lap but that 
■ didn't botlicr eurly letFder Ron ‘Revels and' 
eventual mai n event winner Goodfe llow ns the_ 
"latter driver fulfilled a promise to ivm’his first 
race of the year Saturday. 

“1 just said I was'going to come out and win 
-il-ionigiit,— Goodfellow said.-^^I-took-Uie-he«t- 
and I took the main. When J’set my mind to 

doing sometiiing, I do it.’- - — — 

Goodfellow was in the triumvirate of racers 
that included Shawn Nice and Todd Audet in 
charing down ftcvcls in his baby- blue 

-Mustang. i_ . . _ _ 

But Revels could only hold the lead for _ 
short two Itkps before being taken over by 
Nice, who led for six laps before Goodfellow 
ciiargcd alicad on Lap 9 of the 25-lap nice. 

He grabbed the outside lane on Nice and 
from there, motored out lo a big four-second 
lend over the rest of the ’paek.lcd by Miei», 
Alan Larson and Audet. 

Points leader David Caldwell Jr. slowly 
.began..to.creep.forwarfUn-hi^bluejlo.-3 
Chevy Moiua as he first passed Larson, caught 


-GoodfcUow^bbcdWrfirsrvlctoiyofTho 


Pit Stops 

Spore a dime? A grandstand fundraiser for 
Burley Super stocks driver Clint Kidd was 
held prior to the class’ two heat races. Kidd 
lost his wife Diana in a tragic aeddent June 20 
and all of the Super stock drivers walked 
through the audience collecting donations for 
Kidd’s trust fund for his children who were 
also injured, the total raised was 53,005.33 ... 


Hot heat Coming out of tlic final iiini of tlic- 
Strcct slocks A heat race, Miles and Hntke got 
tangled up, going over the track emb.'inkment. 
both drivers were OK but the front ond'of 
^Ics' car<Was smashed up pretty good. An 
army of helpers worked frantically trying to 
straighten out the damage, to no av.tii; hut 
Ron Pierce loaned his car io_Milcs_... Sweet ' 
songstress Nampa country singer Rachel 
—Johoson-dcliglucd thacrowd-wiili.Lluuiatlonal.- 
anihcm and a couple of ditties before nuin 
event racing got under way ...Friendly lender 
Budweiser Street stock driver Troy Carotliers 
“loaned hIs'Norl? Ford Must.'ingTonysiock tb ‘ 
friend and Pony driver Nice wiso damaged his 
regular runner a few weeks back ... Oh woe is" 
me Randy Price was aspccintor Saturday due 
to a hose problem and didn’t want to take tlie 
chance at blowing his motor, hut he later 

- relenied-and-ran-m the-mnin-e\t?n^firtish}ng — 
dead last ... Like father, like son Western 
Custom Trucks driver Dan Pelirson's son 

- Casey, a Mococross rider, drove >ii.s first race 
of the year behind the wheel of ilie No. 72 
Ford Pinto - his dad's former ear ... That's 

- advertising Twin Falls Super stock driver Rod - 


in hopes of selling It. Too bod ho blow the 

driver Jeff Flynn blew his rear end out earlier . 
in the doy dumg praedeo ... Blown day Street • 
stock driver Clay Boglcy blew his motor 
Turn 2 of the class’ B heat 


Main event results 

SfMiBcu i ncmPONtr jra-MCMM-tOa, 

Va-dODKl: » QM> IUm: r.lVan MO, • C»»n • UoM, Uwx 1 9 M Sm 


Ucr>taUM«.4 TvrC«rwi:iCh,BK»,r.>"*«Q>k>> 

Pa->mzHN>A1 Ijm 

Um S F w UM I U Km 7. NWKn HNI e I . M lUK ? )a i 

TuiMKl MaiUnovlC^XtfnrtnmHMK 


Global GT Se^ gives women drivers chance 


The Associated Press 


Audrey Zavodsky, a nurse for Ford Motor 
Co., spends 10-hour days in a depiirtmcnt that 
watches over the health of 20,000 workers. 

But on weekends she hurls herself around a 
track in a sleek race car at high speeds - a 
soft-spoken caregiver mmed sicdy eyed com- 
petitor. — '■ 

“I like the cxdtcmcnt, because I get ^red ' 
easily,” she said. “And I love the speed.” ^ 

ZavodikyTlriverbn'lh'eTVomen’s lilouai GT 

circuit, a companion to the inaugural 
Am erican Le Mans series. 

The womenk)nly series'was the idea 'of Lyn " 

St. James, who suggested it last year to Don 
Panoz, owner of Road Atlanta and founds of 

_ American Le. Mans. 

“He needed to spice up the competfBon, 
and wc needed to ^vc women drivers a plat- 
form,” said St. Jam^ just the second woman 
to race in the Indianapolis 500. 

St. James bristles at the suggestion that the 
series is simply about putting women in a sep- 
arate doss from their mole counterparts. She I 
says the series offers women the experience I 
needed to compete against men. . I 

“My goal is that whoever wins the champi- “ 

orfchip this year will go on and get a ride in GT Audrey Zavodsky kneels by the eer she drove to win 

senes or Wmston Cup,- *e»ld. ^ w..k In Atl.nl., 

For now, however. Sc. James vyantscredibili- 


the Inaugural Women’s Qlobal OT Series racQ held lest - - 


“I think wc’vc gotten the attention of the 
sport,” she said.- “Now, wc’vc got to do our 
-ixKti We can’t be mediocre. We can’t just be 
another series.” 

The women involved understand this, but 
they arc more interested in the adrcnalinc- 


“This isn’t just a hobby,” Duncan said. “This 
is what I want lo do for my career.” 

- The third of six races in. the series is next 
wcekend.at Portland International Raceway. 

It costs the women 53,500 to race, plus a 
55,000 insurance premium tlint can be carried 
over from 


pumping compet 

the first WGGT hicc at Road Atlanta in 
ren’t radng to be role 


When I finished my doctorate degree, my 
husband sent me to racing school for four 
days," she said. “I was hooked.^’ 

Allison Duncan’s love of fast cars began a 
decode ago when her father took her to a 
NASCAR Winston Cup race at Sears Point in 
Sonoma, Calif. Jjist wcck<md,_thc mechanical 
engihccring' student fimSted'^ond to WGGT 
competitor Cindi Lux on the same track ifi 
Northern California’s wine country. 


their money down and jump in a car. Only 
about 75 of the 200 women who expressed 
interest had enough experience to be dcored 
for competition. 

The women who made it drive identical 
cars, designed after the Panoz Esperanic road 
car. They are powered by 310-horscpower 
Ford V8 engines. 

In addition to the fees, the drivers arc 
expeaed to find their own sponsors - a neces- 
sity for mole and female racers. 

Dana Moore is sponsored by Steady Play", a"' 
sportswear company run'by Alicia Cwynn, 


wife of San Diego Padres outfielder Tony 
Gwynn. 

. . “1 got lucky- with my-sponsor,” said Moore, - 
who lives in San -Diego and is a part-time' 
model. “She knows sports; she knows you 
have ups and downs.” 

•Moore and her WGGT colleagues were the ' 


benefiting from the spotlight 
.^pons in the wake of the 15.S. victory in the 
World Cup. 

The WGGT racc'rs, many of-whom compete 
with men in other series, admit that it’s still - 
tough to prove themselves os competent dri- 
vers despite the gains of St. James and others. 

Yet Amy Rumon, who races against her sis- 
- ter, Niki, says WGGT drivers arc probably 
more comfortable running against men, 

"Gender doesn’t make any difference' to _ 
■'me,” she said. “Ifyou'eairafive'e carTSKvc . 
it” 


Jazz reportedly will sign Malone 
to fourweair$6 7’rnillion contract- 


n,y I r 6 n m;eh t ' 

; f t h 

- t'A r e": ■ ' _ _ 


McDowell has trouble In Seattle - - - 

KENT, Wash.'- Jerome profe.ssional drag racer Miidi MeUcnvell 
had gone two and a half years without himving up an engine. On 
Saturday, he did it twice. 

At Seattlc-lnturnaiional Raceway, McDowell saw a |>air of 
5G0.000 engines go die way of ihe'Mariners bull]>en and tie failed 
to qualify for ah NHI^\ national event for the first time since 

Spring J^7. — — — - — ■ . _ - 

McDowell finished his run at the NIIRA Northwest Nationals 

with-o-limc“of-S.-t6-se«)nds-nt-259 mph■i^■th^-sra^di^g■q«a^ter'— 

mile, good for 17th of 23 cars in the Nitro runny Car division. Ilis 
next race will be in San Francisco liiis weekend at the 'NIIRA 

JHalifornia Nationals. 

Ttviif Falls’ Diana Anderson made'it lo ihe round of 10 mu of 
entries in the Super Sireet category with.a mtuifJSii mpli,in:i0.9__ 
.seconds' ihlier 1968 Camaro. Jeff Devey, also of -Twin Fall.s, niiiiie ~ 
it to tlic final 16 in the, Super Comp caiegoi-y in his rear-engine 
Chevy dragster tvith a nm of 155 nipii in 8.92 .seconds. 

Schihabrieads'Cah'dlerldge champronstilp 

TWIN FALLS - Chris Schmiilil fired a onu-over par 63 to take 
the early lead at- the Ciindlcridge Golf Course Club 
Champion.ship. 

One back at 64 is defending diampiun Tony Munnen ami 
; Tiiomlcy WUiams, with course pro Gary Van Enguluii at 65, 

Jon Hennesw and seven strokes ahead of Vern Snodgrass. .„ 

. , On the ladies' side, Tommie Onrlingof Burley led with H 71, five 

.'ahcad-oLLyada.VirdcnJ9ttfundlnA.«luunpion-jMn«uo-J<d>nson— ■ 

and Cindy Byers arc eiglit-bnck ui 79. Annie Koeplin shot an 82 to 
lend tlic first flight, four ahead of Diane Uric. .. ..... 

Play continues tpdny wiihen 8 a.in. shotgun start 

“ “Rve^ayifoccer camirstsrts'AFgrs^ 

TWIN FALLS - Registration remains open for the Major 
League Soccer Camp Aug. 9-13 at Akeasion Fields. 

Players can register until Aug. 7 for the camp in one of three 
divisions, Players ages 5-6 will run from 9 to 10:30 a.m. each day 
(559 per camper), players ages 7-11 will run from 9 a.m. to noon 
(595 per camper), and players ages 12-18 will run from 6 to 9 p.m. ‘* 
(595 per camper). There will also t>e a team training program for 
teams of 10 or more. 

All players will receive a ball, T-shirt, MLS gift and a written 
evaluation. Family discounts arc avnilblc. 

For more information, call 734-5065. . 

Register next weekend for Twin Falls football 

TWIN FALLS - Football registration foCtall 6th and 7ih graders 
in Twin Falls will be held from 10 o.m. to noon Saturday. Aug. 7 « 

- - O’Leary Junior Higj'Scliool. — -l'---:— ^ . 

Cost at registration is 530, and an athletic physical is required 
for portidpation. For more information, call coach Mike Fuller at 
734-9783. 

S^mpede to host free agent camp In Los Angeles 

BOISE - The Idaho Stampede, the newest franchise in the 
Continental Basketball Assodation, will hold its first free agent 
tryout comp of the seakn Aug. 14-15 at University High School in 
Los Angeles. 

The comp will be open to basketball players out of high school 

— who'*hgvc~complcn;dnhGlr^ollcgg~cllgl6111iyrPreTggl 5 t ra rlon~fs 

5160 today, 5180'starting'tomorrow or 5200 at the door. For morc 

information on this and fumre camps, call 323-4667. 

- • — The Stampede begin their season on thcToad NovrlO-ZO against 

Fort Wayne and Sioux Falls, and return home Nov. 22 for a nine- 
gome homestond Manning with Fort Wayne. The team's 56-gamc 
itinerary indudes 26 home games played at the Idaho Center. 

British, soccer camp'comes to Buhl 

BUHL - Challenger British Soccer Camps will offer a week-long 
training camp through the Qcar Springs Soccer Assodation, with 
thrcc-hour sessions for novice players and experienced players 
and teams. . . 

The camp v^l run Monday through Friday, Aug. 16-20, at the 
North Park Complex in Buhl. Eadi camper will be coached by a 
member of tlic professional British staff flown to the USA' exclu- 
sively to perform a series of summer coaching camps for the 

Kansas City-based company. 

Challenger British Soccer Camps will coudi 40.000 players and 
more than 20,000 coaches this year. During the week of the camp, 
the staff will hold two free coachingdinics for parents and coadi- 
cs at the North Park fields. Each dinic will begin at 7 p.m, and 
-will covcr-such areas as organization of practices,, tcdmical and _ 

I - tactical drills and systems of play. This'eamp has room for players 
ages 5-18 years. Any player needing or wanting to increase hi^icr 
skill level for the upcoming fall season is invited to attend. 

For more information on this camp or coaches’ dirties, coll Tesa 


cgistraDon wUi continue to team capacity, 
only 15 players per coach maximum. 

Register for mutton busting In Rupert 

RUPER'T - Early registration is underway for mutton busting at 
the 1999 Minidoka County Fair Rodeo on Aug. 5-6. 

“Kid Size Cowboys” arc needed for mutton busting and calf, 
steer and bull riding competition during the annual open horse 
gymkhana on Aug. 4 at the Minidoka County Fairgrounds. 

Partidponis need to be registered and stock fees paid before 
the event begins. Stock fees arc 55 for sheep, riders can wcigli up - 
to-60ponnd^l0Torcalveyride r s in usrbe 10-14' 3 ' L ‘ an»u ld;-Sl5 fur -~ 
steers, riders ages 14-16; ond SIS for bulk, riders ages 16-18.' 

~ — ; — — Cotn^fromriaffreparts 

electric Shaver Troubles? I 


BUSmlESS„ 


SALT LAKE CITY - KorJ 
Mdone wort't be a free ogwe for 
long. 

The Utah Jazz reportedly will 
.slgn.the.twoTtirae.NBA Most 
■Valuable Player to a four-year 
.■'rahtract w'6rthrihe'fflaxlmuni'$67" 
million under NBA salary cap 
rules. 

- - The Salt Lake Tribune report- 
ed the pending contract, and - 
Malone as well as Jazz owner 
Larry ^llcr confirmed fdr the 
Associated Press that a press 
conference is planned today to 
announce Malone’s re-signing. ‘ 
The NBA’s new collective bar- 


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gaining, agrccraont allows 
Malone to receive $14 million 
next season, plus annual -12 per- 
cent raises over the next three 
seasons. 

Malone, voted MVP in 1997 
“and'againthls season,' jun corn-" 
Dieted a four-year deal worth 
$20.2 million, an amount he 
- grumblcd about for years. 

The 35-ycar-oId forward also 
has-been an All-Star 11 times,' 
has two Olympic gold medals 
and ranks among the league’s 
career scoring leaders. 

. Malone played in^49 of 50 
games last season, missing one 


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due lo suspension. He averaged • 
23.8 points in 1999, his lowest 
since 1986-87, his second year in 
the league. 

His rebounding average was 
down to 9. 4, slowest since his 

“rookie year; . 

Malone led the Jazz to a 37-13 
record last-season,’ but it'ended j 
on a bitter- note when Utah was 
eliminated 'in- the Western 
. Conference semifinaFs hy the, 

Portland Trail Blazers. 

In the series-clinching loss, 

'' Malone finished with a career 
playoff-low eight points on 3-of- 
16 shooting. * 


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Sports. 


■ ■ _LE\VISTON ■- U»bby Trivitt 

illrcn-f a comploto name nnd Jnke tal. 

Robenson was S-for-S as ibo He rcce 
Twin Falls Cowboys bcai stitches, bi 
Caldwell 9-3 Saturday in the damage. ' 
opening round of the Clas.s AA "He chip 
Anterican Legion state baseball .looks like 


-Amerlcan-Ugion- 


. He received a total of IS 
stitches, hut had no structural 
damage. ' 

"He chipped a tooth, and he 


tournament. 

— Robertson had'threc .sinRlo.s,"a 
double and a triple and stole two 


Loompus, but he'll survive,'^ 
Federico siiid. “He lodkslike the 
Elephant Man. He looks like 


— bascsrandTrivirrscarrcrcd .seven" — Rocky after Tlocky ITI." 
hits, walked two, hit one and . ti«ir*t.caM) 

.struck out three. SSui-toi 

"(Trivitt) fell behind'in the 
count a little bit but he kept mak- ^ 

— ing thom-pui-the-bali-in-play,". f-nral-tpamct-Qtflrf 

said Twin Falls Mike Federico. ® 

who mis.sed most of the game CISSS A tOUm6y In B 
after accompanying on injured BOISE -The Ametict 

-pbyer-to.duUiuspituL Glass A-state-l)asabal 

In other games. Upper Valley . ment bogan Satut 
beat CoLMtr d'Alene lO-O. the Timberline HiglrSchoo 
Boise Cem.s l)eat Fosi Fnll.s ll-O, Magic Valley's three re 

and Focatello raced off the tives gut off to a .strong s 

LewLston lace Saturday niglil. Buhl defeated th 

Briindon Miller added three Senators IM in five inn 


Twin Falls, which lokes on the 
winner of the FbcateUu-Luwision 
— game tuniHlu at - 

The Cowboys turned three 
double play.s, and 17 of Trivitt's 
outs were on ground balls. ' 

Casey Turner was hit in tl'ie 
"Tacfr^dth\rr.lsllf.iir^ne''sccorid“ 
inning and rushed to the hospi- 


“Local teams'start strong In' * 
Class A tourney In Boise 

BOISE - The Amotiesm Legion • 
— Glas^ A-stat^-l>asel>alt^tourna — 
ment began Saturday at 
Timberiine High' School and the 
Magic Valley's three representa- 
tives got off to a strong start. 

Buhl defeated the Boise 
Senators 1 M in five innings, and 

inning four-liittcr as Burley 
edged'^^oscow 2-1. In the late 
-gomg7~Jerome-we . s-h-hettvy— 
favorite to beat the iiost Boise 
Gems. • . . 

"Really, what got it done for us 
was the boitom part of our 
^rdcr,” said Bulll coach Gary 
Krumm. 


''Our seven, eight und nine 
— (hitters) -were awe s o m e.” ^ — 

The bottom third of the Tribe’s. . 
order went a combined 7-for-7 .a5 
pitcher Adntn Reynolds and Josh 
Prince .each scored 4hrcc timesi 
'and Prince and Chris Flynn each 
hud three hits and coipbined for 
G REIs. 

- Brad Ross w.as 3-for-l for Buhl, 
and catcher Cory H.-iinition had a 
iwo-nm single in a fivc-rtin fjfih 
imtlng . . 

"Adam threw really well, so we 
got to save him tsvo innings, 
which was important," Kriiinm 
.said. Under Legion rules, a pilch- 
—er cun- pilch-only -12-infimgs-on — 
three consecutive days. 

That means Reynolds, who 
. threw four of the five innings 
— Saturday-beforo-Nolan-Riutkerk — ■ 
pitched a perfect fifili, has sewn 
innings to use today and lomor- 
• row. 

Aric Reynolds will take to the - 

hilt today against t^tc winner of 
the Jeromc-Boisc Gems gamy at 

Burley plays- today at 3 p.m. " 

against the Boise Enrons, who 
-bimi-i{«intiers-Ferr y 3-2 . - 

A loss Saturday would send 
Jerome against the -- Boise 
Senators at noon. 




Sosa turns up heat in home mn race; 

CniCAGOJAP) - Sammy Sos.i 
hit a pair of homers to raise his 
major league-leading total to 40 
and Gary Gaetti hirhis 11th 
career grand slam as tlic Chicago 
Cubs bent the New York Mcis 
17-10 Saturday. ■’ 

It's the -third time Sosa has 
reached 40 homers in a .season. 

_jHe.has-t]iree multihomcr.gamus 

this year and 36 for his career." ' 

Sosa added an RBI single in the 
sixtii and now has 81 RBIs in his 
last 78 games. ‘ 

The Mets' Robin Ventura went 
4-for-S and drove in siy nm.s, hit- 
ting a two-nin homer in the sec- 
ond, a two-run double in the 

third, a two-run homer in the v$mi, 

'' Dni"s C"l» »•"< US" «»l No» Vork M,t BoJ,r CodsSo n ho 

— tlte-win-wii'lv^ne-inning-oFscore'' — ^HdBaJataJuinia.platftj)iULxquaezaJ)unU)]r.M«U.pl(ch«tJWM4«ilnghUMn- 

-J pss r elict j.-isn n r<jin gii.ni<An (1- durIn£.tho_Cub9ll7.:lQjv)n3alurday. - ^ 

3) look the Joss. Riving UP -five 

“TunrtmTIVFimsnimirrw^B ======»==»b. |)iich-the-seveml»-inn«ngi-an« 

in threo-nlus innincs. ' National LaaFllO Poor appearances 1^ Rudy 

' ® • Sf».nnn!» nnH Inhn Rnrlror nmirltj 


y ' 


Ssottle Mailners outflolder Kon Gilffey Jr. connects for a home run Saturday against the Baltimore Orioles. Griffey's 
American LoagueJeadIng 34th home run lead Seattle to the S-2 win. 


Dlam onilbaclg 4, Dodg ers 2, Edmondsoo.w,5)Xi,j!iojixtii. 

lUS A'NGELES - Randy “ ' — ' " ' " ' 

• Johnson pitched a six-hitter for GlailtS 11, RedS i 

l“lo?d'S7d.Se' 

- • ® .... o in a season-high five i 

Johnson (11-8) struck out 12 Son Francisco handed 

and walked one to wm for only 

Jc »cond time In hi, clghl S“o“o “ ' 

— ,— 3 — . Bonds-hit-a thrcc-run. homer in- 

Tohnioinvia given up seven „ 

earned runs -In Ins lasi s« losses, villonc (5-4) and added n two- 
'' """ ™" 4bot in the third, giving hint 

'■ 1 r u homers - all off left-handers 

•I1.C Diamondbacks won tor .he . nt-bats, 

:^Mi h _ nme in t hoiMajU L gampi, Bon<rsfnlso-hlt tolo-hiimefr 

and imnttho Dodgers to their 10th nis first two at-bots agai 
:Io« in tliotr last 12 games. Denny Ncaglo in a 7-4 lossFri. 

Ismael Valdes (8J) took the niohr 

• loss. ^ ^ ^ 


Giants 11. Reds i Milwaukee - via< 

CINCINNATI - Barry Bonds • Guerrero's ninth-inning di 
homered m his first two at-bats scored Michael Barrett, 
for the second straight game ond voging a four-hit, seveh-tnni 
drove in a season-high five runs - -dedsio'trbrMiktrThurmon. 


-piich-the-seventlt-inning^and — 
poor relief appearances ^ Rudy . 
Sennez and John Rocker nearly 
cost the Braves. 

Expros 4, Bwwers”2 ■ 

MILWAUKEE - .Vladimir 
Guerrero's ninth-inning double- 
scored Michael Barrett, sal- 
vaging a four-hit, seven-inning no 


With the game tied 2-2, Eric 
Plunk (2-2) walked Barrett with 
one oiit. 

— A-fter-Jose-Vidro-flied-outr 
Guerrero smashed a pitch into 
the Icfi-ccmer gap for his team- 
leading 72nd RBI. 

Mike Myers relieved Plunk, 
and.Brad Fullmer tripled to. 


— Bonds-aiso-hit-soio-homers in ri^t-cente r, s co ri ng Guerrero. — 

his first two at-bats ogainst Anthony Telford (3-2) pitched 
Denny Neagle in n 7-4 loss Friday the eighth for the win. Ugucth 
^ ^ Urbino, w^h ^trade^jrum^s 

game this season and the 38th of ninth for his 21st save!^ 


• DI . A MM... II... n aijuiuii ults joui ui ruHin lor ms ^isi savo. 

; PlratBS 4, Marlins 2 his career, moving him ahead of 

: PltrSBURCH - Dale Sveum, Stan Musinl, Ted Williams and ' CafdloalS 6. ROCklSS 5 

' his career seemingly over when Juan Gonzalez into 20th place on • .. , ~ . 

the NSW York YonkLs demo, pd ' .he .ill-time list. ) hifT.is 440 h ;o™, 

him 10 bullpen coodl las, se.-isoo, Jig , n 

B™''“8,PWIIIea6 . ,;lJ^?eSiraXh„V.‘s’'ti!‘e 

^Tn^nn mn.t« Wc ATLANTA- Bnon Jordan hit a teams tied a major league record 

Jason Sdimidt (10-7) made his two-run homer and drove in four that’s been accomplished 19 

: livf niVs and striking oul seven East- TodTHd'ton, Dante Bichette ■ 

6^^. innine* on an oppres -Jordan's lOth homer, off jlm' ' and ^Hnny Castilla liemtTcd in « 

_..;siy^-hQi.andhumldJS.dcgrec_-Poolerin-the-scvomhrhelped“-rbV-b-S^-^iS^^ 

r Atlnnta-take a one-half game - third to puc Colorado ahead 44). 

The Pirates were shut out by lend over the New York Mots Tho Cardinals nnswored .vith 

Mori ns rookie Vlad mir Nunez and ended the Phillies' three- back-to-back homers by 

for five innings in his second game winning streak. McGivirc and Fernando Tads to . 

careof-swrij-hut-Brian Giles-hit a Philadelphia,Hn- third -place,* fell— cuahc gap t6->F3- ^ 

tying solo homer estimated at five games off the division lead. McGwire has 12 homers In His • 
448 feet off-reliever-Brian - Tom Glavine's decision to last 16 games and 39 overjiU. 


Cardinals 6, Rockies 5 

ST. LOUIS - Mark McGwire 
hit his 4S6th career home run 
and JjD. Drew broke a sixth- 
inning de with a solo shot as the 
teams tied a major league record 
that’s been accomplished 19 
times with five homers in the 

—third inning: — 

Todd Helton, Dante Bichette ' 
' and %nnny C^tiUft ho mfered tn ii 


— - — BOSTO^(A^.^oso Offerman ^ 
CrTpIcd to lead off the ninth' 
inning, then scored the winning 
run to give die Boston Red Sox a 
6-S viaory over New York and 
spoil Roger Clemens’ return to 
Fenway Park'in a Yankees uni- 
form. 

.. Clemens failed to record a sin- 
gle 1-2-3 inning while allowing 

four runs and five hits in five-plus 

innings. He struck out three and 
left with a lead before- Boston 

. came back to win the game 
ogainst the Yankees' bullpen. 

Offerman, who reached base 
a ll fiv e dmes up in his first m me 
from a fow-gamc benching, 
hit 0 line drive deep to center 
field for a standup triple off 
— Ramifo-Mendoae-H-7-Hn-t h e- . 
ninth. 

He scored when John Volcndn . 
lifted a fly ball down the left-field 
line that Shane Spencer let drop 
in for a single, knowing he 
. couldn't throw Offermon out if he 
had caught it , 

Derek Lowe (2>2} earned the 


Indians 13, White Sox 10 

"TCLEVfiLSNt) •- RoBerto 
Alomar homcred twice, RJchlc 


American League 

homer, as the Indians took on 8-3 
lend. 

However, Cleveland reliever 
Steve Karsay couldn't hold the 
lend, and after die White Sox tied 


sretum 


-extend-his-hittin g streak to-28 

games and 'Hoincr Bush~HaB 
three hits and two RBIs for 
Toronto. 

Down 4-2 in the fifth, Greenhit 
. a sharp grounder off the gIm'C of 
second baseman Damion Easley*. 
scoringTony Badsta. After Green ' 
stole second, David Segui fol- 


-emh, dic^dions. low^ with a two-out RBI single 


scored five runs in th e bottom 
half,“highIighted“byUrariyan’s 
double off Carlos Castillo (l-I). 

Paul Shuey (6-4) got the win in 
rclicf..Mikc Jackson got nvo outs 
for his 22nd save. 


'Mariners'S, Orloles'2 RoyHaiL 

SEATTLE - Ken Griffey Jr. hit scoreless it 
his AL-lcading 34th home run the Blue J 
Una jamic Moyer won his lOth versus uen 
game for Seattle. ^ Koch eani© 

Cal Ripken failed to hit his 
400th career homer, in his fifth Athletics 
straight game, but Griffey got his OAKLAl 

384th off Sidney Poiison (9*7) in Olivares p 

the first inning an opposite-field- innings in h 
shot to left field. Chav 

Moyer (10-S) gave up two nuts homcred. 
in the second inning, but that was Olivares i 
it. He allowed seven hits and no personal 
wnlkSi-whil^Srriking out_onc in 'streakl-did. 

:elglitiiinin”gs. "He ivoh his second^ run Kivinc 
straight stan since missing a start' walki He a 


off Dn v o'Xnirlri ( ^IQ) tO aT — 

.4. 

- Bush hit a tiebreaking RBI* 
infield single in the sixth to give 
Toronto a 5-4 lead and Green’s 
31st homer in the seventh made 

Jt.6=4. . 

Roy Halladay (6-4) pitdicd two 
scoreless innings for the win, as 
the Blue Jays improved to 7-1 


Sexson-hit s three-nin-shorand — with shbulder-stiffness and-for 
rookie,jlus»!ll Bronyan drove in *he ninth dmc.in his last 10 ded- 


Athletlcs 5, Devil Rays 1 

OAKLAND. Calif. - Oqsar 
Olivares pitched seven strohg 
innings in his Oakland detnu and 
Eric Chavez and John Jaha 
homcred. 

Olivares (9-9), who snapped a 
, personal three-game losing 
streak, did not ,^ew.aa-eamed — 
run, giving up fobr lilts and six 
walks. He struck out th ree as th e 


448 -feel off-reliever-Brian ■ 


two runs with o-key double os 
Cleveland recovered after blow- 
ing a big lead. 

._Alomax.hiLQ.two-run. homec— 
ond connected for o three-run 
shot in the fourth inning.' 
moments ofter Sexson’s 21st 


sions. - 

Jose Mesa pitched the ninth 
for his 21si save-in-24 chances. 

"Blue“Jay^trT'gers 6~ 

• TORONTO - Shown Green 
went 2-for-4 with a homer to 


"'AVwon'thor fifth stnu^itTic^ie 
game. 

Doug Jones got the final five 
outs for his fifth save; 

Wade Boggs went.O-for-2 with 
-two-walks-for-Tempa-BM-and-is— 
still eight hits shy of 3,000V 

Tampa Bay’s Rolando Arrejo 
. (2-7) took the loss. 


A’s get Appier, sened Taylor to Mets; Leyritz, Guzman finTnew teams 


„...- ThoAasoclated Press 

Kevin Appier, Billy Taylor und 
. Jim Loyria.swicchc(Llcams wliilc 
Chuck Finley stayed put 
Saturday as’bnscbnll approached 
the 10 p.m. MDT trading dead- 
.line. 

Juan Guzman also got dealt, 
and there was a chance Roberto 
■ Hernandez would be on-thc* 
move, too. 

The, busy Oakland Vy^hlc'tics 
shuffled their staff, bracing for a 
vnld-card run. They got Appier 
from the Kansas Gty Royals and 
also sent Taylor to the New York 
Mets for Jason Lsringhnusen and. 
GrcgMcMidiacl. 

"They’re in a stcp-on-thc-gas 
— — mode,”-Appicnald.— niCyHfin'k" 
they've got a good thing going 
and they're trying to improve 
their team." 

The Mets, meanwhile, made a 
fiye-ployef swap >yith Colorado, 


— obtaining --oulfiolder-Darryl— 
Hamilton and rclicvor Chuck 
McElroy for outfielder Brian 
. McRae and twamii\or leaguers. 

Also moving to New York - 
' again - was Lc^lz. The Yankees 
-rrcacquircd the postseason hero, 
from the San Diego Padres for a ' 
minorlcaguc piidicr. 

In addition, the Yankees talked 
. 10 Tampa Bay about Hernandez 
for their bullpen. 

A half-houT-bcforc the dead- 
line, the Cincinnati Reds bol- 
scerdd their rotation by getting 
Guzman from the Baltimore 
Orioles; 

Trades can sdU be made after 
the deadline, but players must 
-first pa^ througli waivers. That 
means any'dulTEilh'sfep'in and 
block a potential dcal.- 

TTiere was no deni for Finley. 
Thdugh the Yankees, showed 
interest, the Cleveland Indians 
were believed to have pursued 


- -the-Anaheim- 
Qce'thc most: - 
"Chuck 
j-Flnlcy ia still .. 
on the 
Angels, ""gen- 
eral monogcr 
Bill Bavasi 
said. "Wo-did 
not shop 
around, it 
,, , come down to 

JImteyrItz one club. We ' 

gave them a 
group of players wc would take 
ond'it stayco there. Ihcy called 
and said tlicy did not accept it.” ' 
Appier, '31, had been rumored 
in possible deals since spring 
•t raini ng. The righ t-han der was 9- 
"9 wItfi‘a'4.87'XRA, and 114-89 hi- 
a career that began with the 
Royals in 1989. 

"I'm glad, but I'm not saying 
that I hate Kansas City or the 
fan-s” Appier said. 'Tm going to 


—miss them and it’s-not-like-Pm- 
going to leave the dty." 

Oakland traded three young 
-.pitchers for.Appiec..Biakc Stein. . 
Jeff D'Amico and Brad Rigby. 
The Aihlcli^ 3.5 games behind 
Toronto in the wfla-card rheei 
also sent awoy the 37-ycnr-old 
Taylor, who hos26 saves. 

“Wc appreciate Kevin’s long 
ond loyal service.” Royals gener- 
al monogcr Hcrk Robinson said.- 
“However, the Royals organiza- 
tion has mode a commitment to 
.reducing payroll. and joking ' 
odvoniogc of signing the numer- 
ous picks we had in this June’s 
omotcUr draft.” '• 

The Athletics recently traded 
..pjt^ciiKcnny Rogers to.thcMcts— 
and also got pitcher Omar 
Olivares ond Inficldcr Randy 
Velordc from Anaiicim. 

“When wc made all these 
deals, wc had a grand plan in 
mind," Athletics general mpnag- 


— cr-Biiiy flenne said.-“One hadto'" 
fall in order for the other to fall 
This is a big deal." ' - * 

. .-...“We .wonted. to.add.to4he-pre-- - 
sent and future with every deal 
wc did. Kevin has been a No. 1 
and he bring.s n No. I mentality. 
Tlierc's a lot of value in that,” he 
said. “We weren’t opposed to be 
licre in July. Now we’re trying to 
make our mark in this race." 

There had been talk the AL - 
East-leading Yankees would send 
sthiggling starter Andy Pettine 
.io Philadelphia, butmanager-joe^- 
'Torre said before-Saturday’s 
game at Boston, “I don’t think IPs 
going to happen.” 

. In the meantime, the Yankees 
-completed a deal-for-LeyritZi 

"They could have traded me 
- anytvhcrc, but it shows the 
of this organization to give me 
another opportunity back in New 
York,” Le^tz said. 

"Playing in New York for as , 


manyyears’asT'dia, it’s almost 
-like being in the World Scries 
every day. I thrived on it while I 

-^vms there," he said. , ' 

Leyritz, 35, is hitting .239 with 
eight home runs and 21 RBIs. He 
can play first base br~DH, and 
was Pettitte’s personal catcher. 

with the Yanked 
The Padres got minor leagpe 
pitcher Geraldo Padua for 
Leyritz. The 22-yeor-old righty 
was 9-4 with a 2.86 ERA for Oiss 
■ A Greensboro. 

---Colorado . andf“the~Me^ •• 
swapped, center flelckn and lefi- 
handed relievers. The Rockies 
alw got piccherRigo Bdtxan and 
minor league outfields Tboniiis 

Jo hns o n. : -*’• 

. Hamilton, 34, was tgftiitg 3 q^ . 
with' four homers and 24 RBIq. 
McEm^, 31, was -3-1 with a 

ERA.: ■. .. -• 

Both ploni^ to join the Mc)b 
^ today^in Chicago. - ’ ’ 


PCX)RCO 


:s. 



|]coiporate America 
^realizes potential 


\ l : WINNIPEG, Manitoba (AP) - 
■-Slofiball's most famous player 
{•TjW once offered the chance to 
t^ay little Lcoruc boscbol^ - as 
1 ttnga^she cui her hair short anti 
’ «gncd up su “Bob.” 
j^'rThat was before Title DC, anti 
Richardson’s only choice at 
' the time. But these days the 
teadui uf j buiyconlng^women’s — 
sport isn't about to hide. 

The 37-year-old inficldcr from 
Orlando, Fla., has won an 
Olympic gold, completed her 
mt^iotl residency and even hit 
pitches off David Letterman, 

; breaking a. few. windows in 
; ilanbattnnoutsidelusstudio. 

Now Dr.< Dot, as the orthopedic 
; surgeon is'known. is leading the' " 
. U.S. women’s softball team at the 
: Pan American Games. Though 
here to win, Richardson seized * 


What got her noticed outside of • 

. softball, though, was that pans of 
that game were shown on tclcvi- 
. sion, including a po.st-game inter- 
view via satellite witli BoU Costas 
in which the articulate blonde • 
doctor seized the microphone 
and the spotlight. 

With the exception of the l ast- 
"minulclioroics, tlic team foll^ to 
receive muclt air time. That won't 
be the case in Sydney, Australia, 
at the Summer Olympics, says Ed 
Markey, a spokesman for NBC 
Sports. 

Virtually every minute of 
every game played by the U.S.- 
women's softball team - os well 
as the women’s soccer and ba:^ 
kctball teams - will te auiicd on ' 
one of the network’s three cover- * 
age arms, he said. Decisions tike 
that aren't made on the basis of 


tion to promote a parallel mis- 
smn: proving that female athletes 
! ant not ji^ talented, they’re mar- 
.^kciablc. 

Buoyed by a national TV audi- 
: joice for the WNBA and the U5. 
;T»romcn’s Mccer team that won 
■ sBe World Cup, Richardson 
^ ^believes it mi^t have dawned on 
: -OJTporatc America that women in 
will sell 

believe there has been a 
I Siraiar change for women in sport, 

• iMt we have a long woy to go,”. 
; she said. T don’t think it’s a ques- 
' tion of fairness, it is a questi on of 
;Tdcvi^ptiichr.- — — ' — .. 
She thinks it is just a matter of 
dme - it’s hard to say how long - 
' before women cam the recogni- 
: tion she bclicv'cs they deserve. 

Athletes like Richardson stand 
; to benefit the most if a trend is at 
' hand. 

■She hit the game-winning 
home run at the 1996 Olympics in 
Atlanta, the first titne softball 
was an Olympic event, liftin g the 
United States to a ^13 ~ ~ 


“We have a S3. 55 billion - 
that’s B for billion - investment 
in. the Olympics through 2008,” 

■ Markey'said. "That answers your 
question." 

, .. Even the Icss-than-lavish cover;. _ 
age propelled Richardson to cor- 
porate notice, earning her some 
13 endorsement contracts with 
companies like Coca-Cola and 
Reebok. Still, there were chal- 
lenges. 

She designed a glove that fea- 
tured smaller fingers, making it a 
comfortable fit on a child’s hand. 
Executiv es in marketing love d it, 

— Sur3jdn’t*wBnt her-slgnature on- ' 
it, thinking that little boys 
wouldn’t wear anything with a 
woman’s name on it. 

So she persuaded them to do a 
tost: one Dot Richardson glove, 
and four others without no name. 
The Dot glove took In revenues of 
obout SI million. The others 
didn't do so hot. 

"Woke up, corporate Amcrico, 
who d o you think does the shop- 
^ing?''Richard8on said. '‘Women 



• - - : — ....Sitiu rs 

Unidentified (Canadian 
athlete fails doping test 


WINNIPEG. Maiun.h,, - 
An unidi.-nufH-d Canadior. i-'i 
...failvd {*«.;■- 

American Caru'-. "be i.:v: 

..nalion'v .-.-i-r-.TvrT.-w- 

firmed Saturdji-. 

The Canadian 0]>=p.c 
Association would nm >un 

sport was_in_V(ilv<-d.'ir 

dopinc mfraciion “£ft^rd 
tlfc Pan .\nu.-ncan 
Organization nc>ii:'it-d ibe CO.^ 
that a Canadian athlete le-ste-d 
positive for a contiollt-d <.=h- 

PASO's Medical Comn.;sv::c; 
said it will ren- ■ . ..._ 

der a decision 
today cm 

. whether a dop- 
ing infraction 
_t^occmTod-_ . . 

If is the firsT 
positive test at 
' gaitifST 


* Xrriiirar voarfjci 
ami i. 
_yaahi:xpji!ri^. 
didrftfTtca 



Americah ten- 
nis and iJofihall 
players were 
very siingy. and 


r>: 


_CT5aci Rafrh,. 
Riyjsxsd -aai 
Dou:% 
~:si£- is 1! hiV 
zcaci. -s'-th - 

- Ralph RayiivKidL ==s asc rwr 
women* 




Shortstop Dot Richardson reacts to ths U.Sr Pan Am loftbalt team's 94 win 
over Colombia Thursday In Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada, 
love to spend money.” 

• Her quest for more corporate 
notice for female athletes is the 


latest step in thrcc-dccadc pro- 
gres.sion that began wiili a dream 
of playing in the major leagues. 
Thougli that didn't happen, she 


injured, and not just because he 
needs her on the team: A serious 
hand injury could destroy her 
career as a surgeon. 

Even so, she isn’t going any- 
where. She’s passionate about 
the gome, but It's more than that. 


.bccamc-ih^bsLtecogiiizablei^RUhfliidsonjeci&iarsensej:^ 
player in a women’s sporniiQt - - - 


Ihe women’s 
baskcnball team 
was anything ' 

i bull leming it to the to «3 
vage U5. pride cm the co-jn. 

Nobody was xsorc dasiszrzrig' 
than 18->y^-<dd t etuti* pb a a ri g — 
Alexandra Stet'cssan. whl> railed 
Francioe Harvey of .Asticpiz &Q. 
6-0. It was her double ^,nrr.i; 
since she was. a junior in hifh 
sdiodL 

Survenkin. the firsa wanus in 
the IVimbledan sesu^nais 
as a qnalificT. has log two 
in-four sets. She has spent, as 


St^XiTU.tIjch 


£_ cf thc-ie \tr:r_g 

Tictccies ca-te- a weals pettV.r- 
mrc-iar the wtmeus baJ,et- 
baO scfuad. whsch 


gets moj-c aiicniion than the 
men's gome. 

She’s the elder staicswoman of 
softball and will be 39 if she 
mokes the Olympic team playing 
in Sydney, She is even promising 
CO ploy in a professional league 
for one year after the Olympics 
before embarking on her medical 
chrecr full time. 

Her conrh Rnlp h Rny tnnH^, 


>u t her g cuin g dtan when I started.” 


Pate Sampras returns a 
' shot agidnst qoallflar 
. James Sakuiov during 
thalr samifinal mateh 
Saturday at the 
• - Mercedewfienz Cup 1ft— 
. Lae Angeles. Stmprsa 
breezed through the 
mitch winning 
64, ^2.. _ 



responsibility, toTicr tcamiti^Btes 
and her spon. 

"I believe that all of us have 
been given talents and the great- 
est blessing of all is to be able to 
be given that opportunity to 
express those talents,” she said. 

“I feel that, when I am on the 
field, l.feel that in the operating 
room. ... And I do hope tiut when 
1 am Hnished with this spon that 




Tbe CabaB wocies ere;- 
wbe^ed che Cased Snr«r> v,*.;h 
qarkacfis. dcrr«> ro the 

basket a=d a tr^ppinx zor.c 


iecting pins aV on her grouzid- 
strokes and serve. 

“Pm mainly looliiag fw 
from other countries.” said 
Stevenson, whose opposes:' 
asked for her autogr ap h after the 
mat c h . The odw uA wnmim is 
acijoo was lilia Oflerloh. who 
defeated Joelie Schad of the 
Daminican Repuldie 6-3, 6-3. 

Cecil Maaiin beat Simas 

_64;.Btoh.B;f3'an .was.a fi-l, 6-1 .ws>-. si 


rr7<^r-:rif;rc« a.~.g 
^ neser recjs-eTKii 
No’scch pmbfiar-s .'fcf the t.' S. 
oes’s sijsad of CSA aE-«;a;v 
Sparked br the shot-swatting 
defesse cf 7-facc \Lkk; Mocre. 

Cel T fti:rs.rs led the .^aerica.'^ 
wish IT ),* j: i V 3£xre ceenriburixi 
seues px'^rv , Sre fe fc wtnrb ami 
r* , ' ■» Wy-irf.-^ :^f»4 jessratfv 


D^es surges into diTMaurier leacT 


Sampras rolls, reclaims top ranking 


Tennis 


LOS ANGELES (AP) - Pete 
' Sampras made a case for being 
- the best male tennis player ever 
once againr overwhelming qualh DavenpOrtSCOreS^aSV 

- semifinal win over Frail er 


Spanish rmol. 

. Costa, the tournaihem’s fifth 
seed, will meet fellow clay-court 
—apecialist . .and — countryman 


of the Mercedes-Benz Cup.' 

Sampras, who turns ^ on Aug.^ 
12, entered this tournament' 
ranked second in the world 
behind Patrick Rafter, but moves 
up c'oTfb. 1 by leachuig'theflriOls. - 
- Sampras, winner of 12 Crand 
Slam titles - tied with Roy 
Emerson for the most ever - will 
' thus be ranked as the \4orfd*s 
best player for a record 271st 
vjeck. 

Sampras shared the mark of 

?? n w o^ewith TVan T>ndl. 

' Sampras, who grew up in sub- 
urban Palos Verdes, will meet 
the winner of Saturday nigh t’s— 
late semifinal matek between 
defending champion ^nd top- 
■ seeded Andre Ag^ and uhher- 
^ded Ausaalian.Ahdrcw Hie for 
the championship today. 

Sampras, who has won his last 
16 matches needed just 55 min- 
tttes to disp^ of the 22-yeor-old 
SbkuloT, who had the look of a 
weekend recrcatrdnal~playor ' 

. .when he look the Los Angeles _ 
T.aania-Center court, and ulti- 
mately played like one. 

**rve never'really heard of. 

■ ’ him,” Sampras said of Sekiilov, 

— immediai^yuiuLking clear.be.. 
ojeant DO disrespect. 

1 ^t’s always a little unsettling 
lb play someone you’ve never 
plqr^ I mOT have overwhelmed 
Jiim a little' bit,'the way I start- 


STANFORD. Calif. - Defending 
champion Lindsay Davenport won . 
the first eight games and needed 
less than an hour' to defeat Amy 
Frazier 64, 6-4 Saturday and reach 


WestGossic. _ 

Davenport^ who used hef'tIUe at 
this. tournament last year as a 
springboard (oword a.U.S. Open 
crown and the No. 1 ranking. iviU.. 
play Che winner of Saturday night’s 
.late semifinal between Venus 
Williams and Amanda Coeizer. 

Dovenport, who has n ever lost to 
'Frazier in^ matches, played ncar- 
ly flawless tennis in the first set 
while defeating on error-ridden 
-opponent who was playing-in tho 
Bonk of the West scmirmals foirthe 
first time in 10 years. . 

Davenport rolled throu^ the 
first set in '21 minutes, struggling 
only in the sixth gome - when she 
had to fight off two break points. 

Frazier won three games late in 
the second set to pull Mthin 5-4 and 
won the Erst tiro points of the Hnol 
gamo,-but Davenport fou^t off a - 
break point and rallied to hold her 
servo'-^copplng'ihe 59-minute 
match with two st^ce winners. 


Costa, Vicente advance 
to.flnal In.GeneralLOpen 

' KITZBUEHEL, Austria - 
Defending chompion Albert Costa 
downed top-seeded Yevgeny’ 
Kafelnikov 7-6 (7-5), 6-2 Saturday In 
the semifinals of the $535,000 
Generali Open, setting up anall- 


Costarwho Tvill-bc making'his 

third title match appcpancc in 
Kitzbuchcl, is looking forms second 
victory on the ATP Toilr in three 
weeks. He captured the Swiss Open 

- July 11. Kavcinikov hosn't won a 
tournamenC'since asccnding~brieny 
to the world No. 1 ranking in the 
spring. He last w-on at Rotterdam, 
Netherlands, id Marcli. 

The ISth-seudecl Viccnio.bcat No. 

~ IS Koubek In an crroi'-EUcd match 
that lasted 1 hour,23mjnuics. 

Norman faces Tarango 
“liTCroatra OpefTflnals ; 

UMAG, Croatia - Eighth-seeded 
Magnus Norman and Jeff Tarango 
' battled their 's'ay Solurday ini^lhe 
final oniie-Croutia OpVn-lannis' 
-touniament. , ,' 

Norman advanced by beating an 
exhausted Ivan Ljubl^c of Croatia 
6-0, 6-2, while Tarango stopped- 
Albert Ponos el Spain 74 (104), 64. 

- Norman had a chance for a douUc 
bagel against the 20-year-old 
Ljubicic - who was playing in his 
Erst ATP Tour semifinal - leading 6- 
0, 44 and had four break points for 
54. Ljubidc, ranked 134 at the ATP 
list, somehow managed to'win thot 
game. Ljubidclatcr acknowledged' 
that the previous three mottos of 
the tournament exhausted him. 

— “1 wns'left withourenergyr^he 
said "Whenever I mn, then 1 had to 
take some rest through the fc^owing ' 
six points.” 

Today’s title match will be 
Torongo's Erst ATP Tour Ena! dnee 
1994 in Bordeaux, France. 



, PRIDDIS, Alberta (AP)- Laura 
Davierflgurcd'iPshe'coold'finidr 
one stroke ahead of Juli Inkster, 
it probably would be good 
enough to win the du MauHer 
Classic. After a 3*under 69 on 
Saturday, Davies is concerned 
only with herself. 

Davies made birdie, from the 
bunker on the 
iSih 'hole to Golf 

bufld'a'twcwhor' — , 

lead over 
Canadian Dawn Coe-Jones going 
into the final round of the rinal 
major championship of the year. 

“If I shoot the best round 


"It’s up to me to _ 

Davies also won the du 
Mauricr in 1996, the only other 
dme in its 26-year history it has 
been played in the province of 
Alberta. .w 

Inkster, Dying to win her third 
straight major and get into the 
Hall of Fame, finally looked 
human. She missed six birdie 
putts inside 10 feet and also 

■ ...missed a -2-foot-par-putt. Inkstier- 
wound up with a 74 and was four 
strokes back at 211; Tc-was the 
.'tlrsrtlme she was overpar'since 
April 25, a stretch of 27 rounds. - ~ 
Catriona Ma^ew of Scotland 
had a 72 and was at 210. She will 
be in the final threesome today 
along with Davies and Coe-Jonei,- 
who was meted with cbeers.on 
eveo' tee box from the Canadian' 
gallery on her way to a 72. 

Fb^ Inkster to become only the 
fifth golfer to win three majors in 
a year, she will have to make her 
biggest comeback of the season. 
She had a four-stroke lead after 

— 54~holes~in-the~U.-S.-O pen a nd-- 
won by five strokes. She trailied 

- by one stroke going into the last 
round of the ' LPGA , 
Championship and w on b y four. 

Geli^gertears up babk 
nine for thir<N«und lead 

■ CROMWELL, Conn. - Long 
before he signed his scorecard, 
Brent Geiberger. was in the 
money. A $25,000 check was 

- waiting for him in die dubhcnise. 

His ace' on No. 11 In'the 
GrciUer.Hartfoi’d Open earned. 
him the check from tournament 
spoiiur Canon and put him in a 
position to earn the really big- 

Jdoughtodnyr 

Geiberger shot a 4-uiider-par 
66 tp. go 15-undef Saturday and 
cany a three-stroke lead into the 
final round. It’s a position he's 
not been in before. The six-year 
pro, whose father A1 was the first 


lead Ms todayb SaM iMd. 


B dafac SaMdSi’s OW MMd of Cm 

. Bate StM a 69 sM tsofe a tsMSot 


oh tour to'Sioca a 59. is iacir^ 
for his first a'inoiyv SeN: a e ier 

rounds. 

The ace, 'wac Ct£>ages\ sec- 
ond of 

_ xnatinn point on his fesoopm 
back-nine ralb' dun also mchidfrd 
'three birdies. His t hree ireiaaid 
score of 195 was a »4-fac6e recced 
at the 'TPC at River ifigSilsids. 

Ted Tryha had the day's low 
nMmd.-a 62 that bed the c Mrae 
record, and wBsai 12-eBder. 

ey • • 

for throe strofce — _ 

PARK CITY. Utah - Dare 


eagle a birdie <n last i 
boles to btnid a dBee-ORde lead 

cf the Sesnor PGA Tooths So«e& 
Utah SbowdoMn. 

Eididfaer p er . who three u wela 


‘aya meT IT A Qp« ta 
Dus S&xoes. was ac ISc iaVr 129 
afeer res -ran-rfi c£.:±e34rbaZe_' 
esescac Pack M ek dogrs Conctry 
^CSi^. He stool 9^=der 63 oc 
.'Sicxdae. bcisasedby cn . ... 

ZSch and X7±. 

Tsed fec-secssd place were 
Bale tr w ig. jbfcs Mahaffey a=d 

.-4-jiwi-iii-*- fS \Sia yjii 

132 as the leaders,, . 
apofc adsann^ of tCBpsacuns. 

B the LWP ^ aderomtast 

SOEa Qcxciey the low 

mi'iri'*' 1 TIT nwkT fT rHt rirfi ’ r r1 

Ce^E ihaa ; ds .aMaadiyqnaS- 

fieg.sft>7.hr^ilPrfieg-<gnod lead 

adaec a Ssaafer 6^ firfU i wtrd witfa' 
a 79 Sasaed^ aad was way oft 
tte pace az 142. Stgve Veriato.. 


mad. shoe a 73 and was at 07. 


COPY 



Plummer calls Cards’ critics ‘imbeciles’ 


. iiAGSTATE, Ar^IAPi- JAe.... 

PJummcr has some very sjroac 
' words for iHc prowiRR dxsus cf • 
critics who say there is no wsn- «?v- 
.Virona Cardinals can be as pood 
as last year's playoff team 


.starts,.yoLi!re pbiiiR-to lose a" 


“The feelinp around camp^iy 


On local talk shows and in 
print, th.- rn-Yf 

been that the Cardinals have 
civen up too much eiperiencc. 
too much leadership, to cope with 
tile mucli touphcT •ehedule that 

follows thi-ir hr t-.ikThr ti iirh Q .7 

season. 

“They're imbeciles to me.” he 
said after the team's scctsid week- 

out Friday. “TKcv do n't know 

anytJunp about u.s.“, 

riummer expects younp play: — 
ers to step up and rvpiacr Brown, 
an offensiie tackle, and Miller, a 
linebacker who left xia free 
, ajld~ lllc ptS priTar fttTThatT* 
Centers, who xeas released. 

“Wp're a younp, team. We're 
poing (n make a few mistakes." 
he s a i d. “Tx-e heard frota a «w ole' 

- ot-pqys xharforeraT TDoldfwtM — 


. game , .bin I don r bcLcx'e that, I that xyc’rc poinp to do some go^. 
think we re going to be fine. things, regutUess of wbo's throwr- 
Wehe eocj pQTS w ho are going to , ing rocks or whai people outside 
step ig> coOeciiiely on this team." are saying,” Plummer said. “We 

Plummer's strong remarks beliexe in ourselx-es. U'ben peo- 
sho we d he is. ;de m* we're not 

Higti5d»ol and alMiUtUS' As far as 

Anrona State Plummer is con- 

Lnixersity to • * eerned. lack of 

step^his lcad- -J:>kf PIitrni ^T a*«»s this j-cm- " 

-.er^p^ole-to— _ would ease last 

befit his status .\n«)nat|lJtUtcrtxidcand year's accom- 

his rfxxj{iiB<;h die: media 

_the-Oez t g r eat — . the team's- first- 

<PM«ertacfcs. playoff x-inoty in SI years; 

■■■ “Xo one guy was the one leader “Obx-iously we're proud of what 

<si the field last year," he said. »e haxe done, but you gt^-sTninv 
harr ~t coUectire group of me and the past," he said, 
w^to.pracnce hard and play “I could care t^<«i t 
baid and do the ri^t thing on last year. If we don't go out and 
and off the field. We still have .. . do as good as we did >ear^ 
mos those guys here, so I don't then it didn't mean anytfau^" 
see things changi&" Plummer would'Uke to have 

„nie_plajers-wil l use_the . wide receivers.Rab Moore. and 
dmdKersastnatrraoacL' ^vid Boonn in camp. Moore is 


embroiled in a contract squabble, 
and Boston, the team's top draft 
pidc.hasyettosign. 

Plummer worked out with 
Moore iii the offsreson, and the 
two shc^d hare no trouble xvith' 

saii 

“David, bn the other hand, I 

haven't thrown. too much.lo,!! 

Plummer said. "Evety rep wc run 
and he's not out there, it’s not 
only me learning about him, it's 

himj earning the techniques and *- 

be^ around Frank Sanders and 
being arottnd Adrian Murrell, 
teaming how to play at the tempo 
' we want to play at." 

Coach Vince Tobin appreciates 
Plummer's fervor, bur he knows 
that the Cardinals might not be as 
good as last year. _ ____ 

"The question is Will wc be bet* 
lerwhen we play Philaddphiafin— 
the season opener SopL 12) tl«n 
when we played KCnniesota at the 
end of the year,'* Tobin sai± “I 
thi&k wehre got some yrniqg guys 
who are fighting for positions, 

— and when it-sons out w e^ g o in g — 
■ to be a better football But 



Super Bowl 
thoughts ^ 


DAVIE, Fla. (APj - The Hafi of Fame can 
wait. Dan Marino wants to get *baick to the 
Super Bowl before he goes to 
. Mahno walks with a limp aixl easily 
opt for. the holiest trend m prafesstaoal gats 

NTLdde. 

“That’s why you're playing - to hare a 
chance to win a championship," he said 
Friday after reporting for his 17tfa training 
czmp xx-ith the Afioml Dolphins. “My pootw^ 
is no differtmt fnxo anybody else m thH locfc- 
ermom. If it is different, thes- probabhr want 
be here long," 

He turns 38 in Se p tember, but he's for 
another season. The way things are going 

£arr>- Sanders retired this wtade at ageSL - 

Juhn Elixay quti in April at 3S. But whife tbey 

speeches. Marino will sii^ -with a familiar 
refrain. 

“Exerybody on the team is real ex^l^“ be 

said. **TVs'u the ome^y«aryeu'Eare to be. '' 

IVc just have to work hard ami turn it loose." 

Marino admits this could be his last 
Despite poor mobiliry 'because of mti> ops» 
tions on his knees, right ankle and right 
AchUlcs' tendon, he has started 44 ocnsecu- 
tivc games. But he realises «^iM 

be a sack away. 

'“Pd love to play as long as I possibly 
but ix'ho lotows?" 31arino said. “At tht« pomt 

in my Carerr ^ -O U K.XX :»« ?n faW» it \nr at -■ 

time. You nests' ioiow what ytxirbeaitb sina- 
tii>n and circumstances around th«» team are 
going to be." 

< With Eiway's r et imneau ; Marino is iIk 
active quarterback remaining from the 


n Atlanta Falcons assistant coach Stove DeBerg, center, Instmets qoartarbadcs 

as ‘ CbrU Chandler, left, and Oaitny Ksnell during training comp practice Ttarsday 
~ — atFimaaa University to-Gr e eavllle, S.C. 

i DeBerg doesn’t want 
rto play agairr^really-^ 

GREENVILLE, S.C. (AP) - The - out to the NFC champions before 
pay ct'i as good. T he re’s not the firs t prncrice of training 

much free time. And the job isn’t camp; “But it can’t mean any- 


■iBBa 


Elxvay xx-on an NFL title. 

The Dolphins lost in the Super Bowl in 1991, 
Marino's '-.econd seasonl and baval been 
back since. Jimmy Johnson touts this year's 
team as by far the best in his four years as 
Miami's coach. 

“The last couple of years we’re barf more 
talent and higher expectations." 

“We'll just hax'e to scs; what bappesjs." 

As Marino's 47-page biograpfay in ttwi Mtartw 
■ media guide notes, he holds 25 ?CFL p»<qng 
records, includ^ career marks for touch- 
doxx-ns (408). yardage (58.913) and onple- 
tions (4.763). 

His right arm shows few en»VK <ci m x lo 
I.as! year, despite Jcdinsoo's 
site the run oxer the pass, Marino tanked sev- 


' Bofloio BIOS 
quarterback 
— DuugRcUe 
procbcadto- 
’ ingtroiniag 
cimp Saturday 
iRRedonlo: 
N.Y. Retie 



nearly as fun. 

That’s OK. Steve DcBcrg knew 
it was time to get on vrith the rest * 
of hislifq. 

Again. I 

From coach to pbycr and back 
egt^ DcBerg wears a different 
uniform to practice for the 
Atlanta Falcons these days, trad- 
ing in his h^et and pads for a 
baseball cap, golf shirt and ' 
shorts. 

“Playing is better, there’s no 
question about that," said 
DeBerg, a backup quarterback 


more to a person than it means to 

The hesitancy in his Vbicir. 
reveals a sense of doubt that* 
1998 actually happened. DeB^~ 
still seems to be waiting for socus7 
one to pinch him in his sleep and 
reveal it was all a dream. 

“I had been in the NFL for 2|. 
years and this was my first ringT* 
he said. “It will always symbolise 
^t year for roe and how qwdal 
it xvas. This will alway^beoneof 
my most cherished things." 

DeB^ twpe^o pl^ 


.lBST_season.and nDW.ji~t]uarier:-__ 6nc mdre-scason,-but-Reaves- 



d pgiphtu qBartartack Ofci itariwo b back for Ms 170 mining onp wttt Ms glgkts wt oa his lec- 
iiper Bowl oppoaraoea and a shot at bb ft*t Soper Bowl tftlt. 


e nth in the NFL in touchdowns <23) and 
yardage (3.497). 

ridaa'treallysecanylerup,"'$aid receiver 
Toot Martin, who was with the Dolphins in 
1990-93 and rejoined thdjiri this year. “He’s 
still throwing the ball with a lot of velocity 
and stiQ has that quick release, and you still 
bare to get yoiir head turned around if you 


don't want it knocked off. He's telling the 
recarers aQ the time, *I want to see your head 
spin around like Linda-filalr In' "The' ‘ 
Eanrdsr."" 

Marino admits the drudgery of training 
camp becomes more difficult each year. But _ 
ihroxx'ing passes is still fun, so he’s back for 


possiDiliiy of ploying again, 
which probably would hove 
drawn a hearty laugh except for 
one factor The Falcons didn't 
have 0 backup quaijcrbock. 

DeB^ earned o job with 
im impressive perfonnance in the 
final exhibition game, became 
the oldest starting quancrback in 
NFL history when Chris 
Chandler was injured and wound 
.up takmg pait-in his-first-Supcr - 
Bowl 

“I loiow this ring they gave us 
means a lot to o lot of football 
playcrs."-said DeBerg, looking 
down at the diamond-sttiddcd 
piece of jewelry that wOs handed 



year is no different this year," . 
said Chandler, who set career 
highs year with 3,154 ya^ pass- 
ing and 25 touchdoxms. “I have. , 
as much respect for him as any. 
coach Fve ever had.? » 

- During practice, DeBeig sticks 
dose to the quarterbacks, offer- 
ing low-key advice on recognizing 
coverages, honing in with the . 
receivers on passing routes and , 

- otlwr nuances of the position.' He 

insists there's no desire to put on 
the uniform and a more .< 
snaps. . 

“Last year was land of a fpft"- ,• 
he said. “I got everything out of' 
last year thafT posably could." ** 


Flutie begins ’99 season where ’98 left off ^ 


FREDONL\, N;Y.(AP)-. While ' Since then, he has been cvery- 

defe’ndcrs found it difficult to where. On cereal boxes, in 

touch him, fans have had no Hawaii for the Pret Bowl, in a 

problem geTuiig to Buffalo BiOs ' banef with his brother Dairen, at 

Quarterback Dow Flutie. Fe n wa-v — 

Seconds after the last snap of P ark 


what anybody says .about his 
height,” receiver Andre Reed 
saidafit^Pluticjiapkover. . 

Win or lose, fans love Flytie. 

'*^bey 

- — relate - to— 


_JCaCJC_XOC. - : 

the first session of training camp the Ail -Star TtXBMhtXnorm.Tf^'sndseCUlit^ 

Sanirday, Flutie fqund them. game's '• . f - jn-t.-rTL 1 - 

. He signed shirts, hats and bd- Celebrity IftBprOjmiM^arui KDO{JonnSOn) 

«h«XAlr • - *Xf - - 


mets. He shook tiny hands. 
. “Whose pen is this?" b» said. 
"Hey, what arc you doing? Are 
you coming back for seconds 

here?" 

' "I drore'all the way front Las 
Vegas just to get your auto- 
' graph," one man said. 

A girl standing in the bleach- 


: with anoib- 

er local 
favorite, 

aaor Blatl \ 

Paatoft. I 

He wore - 

a c o w fac ^ haririiBi be appeared 


n, and RabyMm] ; 2 

b oitehdl of a quarterbeick. ’ rm an 

average 

• - . . jQg. jg 

-DougFluric, 111 : 

Buffalo quarterback and 

• -Sin ce - 

j. joining the Bills as on oiso-ron 


« yd^‘*Bey Do«igl".and gig- - in -television coramerdals for a-^ — and -eareing 

0 lo#t 9 < Plttn* ..A .. J A t__. “ 


gled as Flutie looked up. .grocezy store chain, and recently 

. Hew season, oome old ques- . fae.dooned s'-Cap and gown for 
tion: W ho's the Buffalo Bills* . -cbniDeocement at Cazenovia 
-starting quarterbadc? College where 250 graduates 

The answer is Flutie, at least beard bis appeal for self-confi- 
fornow. rfixire; 

Ertx snee ah odd bounce and n«£lliow3&iiff^ last year 

a big hit, not to me n oo a a porous that a little belief in can 

offensive line, sideixned staner go a long way as be took 
Rob Johnson early last season, from 0^3 to the piayofls. 

Flutie has been The One. ' "ife’s a winner, regardless of 


Comeback Player of the Year-, 
award from The Associated- 
Press, Flutie has earned 'delcbrh - 
ty and respect. 

Off the field he .can have fun. 
Op the field ht» enn relnv a pd_ 
drivel 

-• “Now F don’t rear back and • 
gun it every time," Flutie said 
between double ressions, drip- 
ping sweat on a humid 9&ddgree 


day. “Last year I felt I bad tb'.'C 
prove myself when I was wana-' ^ 

• ing up." -i S- 

Flurie completed 57 percent of S 
his passes for 2,711 ^inls and 20. -5 

— touchdewna-h m yejti '-in- p l< »ff ' • g — 
. Johnson, who went down with a S 
ribinjuryinchcfiftfagamettftbe S 
. . season. The Bills, 6-10 in-Marr «S- 
levy's final season, wound iqt 10 - S 

After a first-round playoff loss 2 
to Miami, Flutie bitt^y suggest- 3 
' ed he'd have to win his sianing 3 ' 
job again. - 4 

Even whfle 'directing the first 3 
- offense as'camp opened, Flutie 3 

j^sbared the starting spoLon the.- 3 . ' 
depth.' chart ' with Johnson.- S 
Johnmn signed a SZ5 million CQD-. 9: . 
tract the year before, so 'Flutie 3 , 

' loiovrs his $6 million bonus won*l 3 ' ' 
buy playing time. >tS 

“I have to use tM« camp to pof-^5 
— pare-t<>-be-the-8t ar t er. »- nu iIt?B — 
sold. ^ -*SS 

“Pve got to perform: Tho^^S 

no security in this profesao&^B 
and Rob’s one hell of a quait^^^S ' i 
back." “iS - I 

■'rsa 


P(X)RC0 



Ex-rodeo record holder 
now protects"CowboysT“ 


CHEYENKE, Wjo. (AP) — seerwresdiag. 

"1*0 he ws KD^ Ward ■ He t urn ed professonal at 19 

ed-of^reacbiBtz.theriUntLnro'jfeJus £tttf.1a~lSSS;set'; 


jvars after be esttre^^ record. 

Hrs rwjng r^ i ^r-u . Ward i ji>ed ICs ht-rytm^ nm /wr ^ inif ^ dur- 
a trip to rodeo's dtampioosltip tag the rodeo’s morning slack, 
eve^ box not as a remprfitia. Mhkh is held separately Cram the 

^Vard, 32, is a rodm pickup mam afternoon p ^rfa niiany^ lo 
man^tte borseman who helps accommodate the large .number 

cowboys diuuuuut hnm Tu g — 

broocs.and faaies broncs and 
IwQs ots of the arcBL It is otK of 
die nut imparrant jobs in tbe 


"I was the first guy out that 
morning,' be said. “I roped my 
calf aad wexu out the ot^ end 


is that a cowboy is going to get 
“hung up," or unabld to free him* 
self frama bucking bronc-Al! he 
can do is try to settle the hone 
down. 

"1 try to rope that horse as f^ 
as 1 mn," he said. "It's parr of my 
job, but I don't want to see any- 
one get hurt" 

Ward said he cannot foresee 


Twih Cih«mo 12 
«< !».«—«»»» »«•)«»& 


DiiP BIUE SEA 









I -EASTEHNX0NFERENCE:^WESTERN^^ 

- ' ATU&fne OmfiON ' PfV HK IH. ” ' 

■ MIAMI HUT c33-ir;Bniuninff»3tv HM ' UMAimwo'ipui^7.u«anm 

Yofk 10 flr»l lOwnd). . onthlp), ’ ' 

. iiciMa: pcrifflour inocUflt, btncn NocdKRepiKwnMfor^WiaMCWim 

Saury cao room; Mono. ' (0 Vwt Owvan Mil tuy ki S«l Anarto. 

. _T 0 Dlmn£>-nii: 0 *nUaMrVi.Re>WtRart.TanY Salary ew roon; About t3.75 iMOtfi. . . 

■ _T?0 fro* •!*«*; JarooJaeliaorv Mam Boio. 


' RimKxrriiihllihcrcanlurtCnarloiOaliley. 

i^k) lool< lo move PJ. OnMO U the Ulm 
, Qen Ricc. 

J 0RLANK>MAUC(33-17.llinilruttad3-lt>y 
* RipiarJeinry i n liral countf). 

TVcfiiv. PixunorwaiO, peotPervq' tcoiln|.- 
Snlary cao room: None, 
r Top tfM 8£fOtj: Ba OuUaw, 


lenouTi. BicfcfealaywnarfroryffnttloaaM. 
Ily. 

_UTAMJAZZaLUuftolniMA3bw(UrUti« 

• In loeondroirt).-- — ' — r - 


7iej:or^P<»Bilorwaro,poMPont>yaeorln|.- • • In aoeorMroirt).-- — ' — r . 

Sniarycao room; Mono- Needa: HakM, youth. 

Top free a£aott! BO Outlaw, Sal^evroanrMono. 

nvrrwmiii:Ouibiw«iR*iay.PennyHania<ny<nll Top free a(orRa; Kart Uaiona. Jorn Staelitwi. 
taPaanioiN>lafa;r«.Raptort.TrMBt>»rtDr — Shmflan AnaataaririafrHrjiMip^rgi^ ~ 
' Rx»nbfriJlKHM»poi»riteeftarto*'Bariiey. 

PHUADaPKIA.T<«n|3S32.«lirnlnMBU40tiy — OetMfS Ua W iUl f M ia OU l T h trpt:«Bh6qBrlK»~~ 
Inplana in joocrd rounuj. Snt *l|nM Is JamM Mek. ' 

Monde Lew poll orrpin. ollentKe ewons. ' . HOUSTON ftOCKIT> (31-19, alMrWed M by • 


Needs; Bactajpcaniaranda theotar. 
SataryeapioomiMene,:..!^ — 

Top (roe i(ants; Chsrlei DarMty, Sam Mack. 
Rumor mill; OsrMay has bean UM« to othar 


p HEW YORK KNiCld (37-23. loM MM F inals 4'1 Uams, aithou|h the Rockats c*o pay hkn nm 


than ar>)«ne also. Ren Harper MUd land IM. 
MtmeuTA TjmRwoLvn (3S«. mhim- 
ed 33 by San Ar^bnlo In first round). 


Mods: Poadr foniwe. atpeeUDy n Joe Srnim 


- end Oirs Tliorpa. -*'• 

BOSTON caTKS lUMi. misled piayorrs) 
Neadi: Semimaiar erertiaul. 

' Salary cap room; Norye. ' ' ’ 


Rumor mill: Ron Mercer tsbrei tib lD «ta Uade to 
. iN-hpjnnsioiddCT.siRnOoliailooMnctaeH 


OAUAS auvERKM iiMi.nisaad tf^i). 
Meeds: 7oniiirda.en and smsa. ~ 

Salary cap room: Nona. 


Rumor mcli; Tryindlo lew tun fll eh mon d , fl(unng Salary cap rei 


Oart Trent, CadrK Caballot. 

Ruiner mill: Don Nation trying 10 trade WaMer 
and a Ho. 1 pkk to Ooslon lor Ron Maroor. 
DOIVERNWOm<l«3e,'rrMMdMa)erft);' ' 
Needs: A eoflUr. 


Top Ree 'scans: MckVsnbat. — ..i 

Rumor miK Vsn Eial menu u sisy atd the 
Muggati went to keep Nm. but the ensngi In 
eanersMp has delayed Me iMenpal detaas 
Rom being ««rM out. 

VANeOUVDI onzutt rSa^.'RMlMplayetls). 
Meeds: wirMng ttuude, 


Rumer mill: Will acquire Siete SmVi from 
AlUnle let luian Rider and St Mitt ane ethar 
player. Dark none contender to get Periiy 


. ^ Ssn Antone In secend reimd). 

JImM: Point 0iard. pOM foraerd. 

'leiary cap room: Nana. 

Tap tree agama: Rick fee. J.R. RaU, Oerok 
Rmar. 

Runer miu: Snapping Clan Rm. >no wet min«d 
.-lor ir»4ipeoming aaeaen. Ha<« nqured aeour — 

Penny Kardawoy. Sestiia Pippan and othart. 
,UCRAMfWtOKlHOC<3Z3Xaiia»ma»ao»3ey— 
Utan In first round). 

Naedt; Oaptn. atoaeUSy Ug man. 

Sstsry cap room: About 14.9 miniMt. 

Top free agams: Cotiitt Miiamson. Vamen 
-ktanwi.-Uwfened fi«atwjn(d;se« Rpasra; — 
Jan Qarry. 


PHOOnx SUNS (27.33. aurruruted 30 by 
Portland in first ro^i. 

Maods: A snaotar and a scorer. 

Salsryeap room; Norw. 


Rumor mill: SaldlobeOfleRngCUnnyUsnnirig 
and Pat Cnmiy far Penny Karaawey. enri Wage 
asu^ for Tom CugUotU. 

SCATTU MPIRSONICt (3S39. milled My- 


Olden Polynlco, Aaron Wplliami, 

RupTKH mill; Modo a lowball offer lo Senrrmof. - 
^enSynngM deiorbup-and are lookitig (e odd— 
somaorye like RKk Toi or CadrK Cabaliot 
OOUCN mra warriors (31 39. nvtsed 
ptayofli). 


Top free ngants: EiKk Damp«r. Tarry Curnmincs. 
-Muggiy Ooguas. Teny Oatk. 

Rumor milt: Wnriiori hotT Raid lo Dampict's 
asking price o< S71 mlfl«n. - 
lOS ANOEUI CUPPERS (941, imsfd pUyofls). 


l£<-iilv Ron H/ii(wi, DiCkey_Sim| 
nut, lUwfrcw La^ O'll Wciwry^ 
II. torn Kui-oc It msilatM!, and . 


Sslaiy cap room: $30 million If oil free aganis 
ore renounced 

Top fraa accnl9: Lereruen Wi«m, Rodney 
Rogrrs. Snerman Douglas, Dainck Martm. Eric 
Pialkowtkl, lyrona Mesby, Lamond Murray, 
Rumor mil: Wngiil Nis loW IheOrppcrsne 
wonT Wum, imu Mesby Is. surprisingly enougn. 
..onoellhemaresaugfilafler free agents.. 


After mon th off, NBA teams p repare to deal 


'Penny H&rdatVay’s career in 
' Orlando could be entering its 
final moments. The same might 
be true of 'Vin Baker's stint fn 
Seattle, although that's a lot less 
likely. 

Steve Smith is expecting the 
Atlanta Hawks to tradc'him to 
Portland, and the Boston Celtics 
_^haye Imctj doing their_uimost.(o_ 
'^cnl Ron Mercer. 

Elsewhere. Detlcf Schrempf 
has gotten mad at ,the 
SuporSonics, Charles Oakley-has 
been hot and cold toward the 
Raptors,' Shandon'Anderson has 
flirted with leaving the Jan, and 
Mitch Richmond is.wondering 
whether he’ii ever get his big pay- 
day.- -- 

Those players, along with 
dozens of others, will get their ' 
answers in the first few days of 
August ns the NBA's ohc-month 
moratorium on trades and frec- 
ogcni signings ends. 

— “This moratorium month has— 
created a sense of a lack of 
urgency," Orlando Magic general 
.jnanagCE_John_Gabciel_said-.- 
Friday, “because there has been 
time to talk about a variety of 
deals while at the same time 
negotiating contracts with the 

Whether the Magic plan to 
Itiivc Hardaway back is one of the 
higgest que^ons to be answered 
in the coming days. Hardaway 
opted out of the imol three years 
of. his controct, becoming a free . 
agent, and seems to have a better 
chance of joining the Lakers, 
Raptors, Trail Blazers or Suns 

ihortsaying in Orlando.- 

“We're still listening and nego^ 

rTitHnn '■ fifthrint 



. said he expects T<? be dcolt to notliing for pohyell Marshall. - 

Portland for Isaiah Rider and The Soniw were scrambUng to 

nnother_pJaycr.^erhapsJim ^il«Ua-replacemcn^fo^Sch^empf. 

Jo^wn or Kelvin Cato. ' ; who was miffed that Seartle 


Rumor ha* It'Atlanta Hawks guard 
Stays Smith could soon ba a morhber 
of the Portland Trallbisizers. 


Portland and Toronto should be 
able to make bener offers than 


tladng,'' Gabriel said. 

Hor^way seems most eager lo 
play in a warm-weather diy, bSt 


The four-time AU-Stnr is one of 
more than 140 free agents who 
have been allowed to negotiate 
‘with all 29 (cams since July 1. , 
— Other- playors.are_atiraciing_ 
widibsprcad interest as well. 

With everyone on the lookout 
for a young, capable big man, 
players such as Lnrenzen Wriglit 
of the Clippers and Jermaine - 
O’Neal of the Trail Blazers liayc 
been inundated witi) offers. 

Trade talk has been rampant, 
too, with Atlanta, Portland, 
-Bo9ton-and'Dal^as•am^)^g^hc “ 
most ^vc teams. 

Smith, who ployed earlier this 
month on the IX.S. Olympic quali- 
fying team in Puerto Rico, has 


Baker, who opted out of his con- 
tract and became a free agent, 
. was leaning toward returning to 
Seattle - but not witliout first con- 
sidering whether he’d prefer to 
- join the Celtics. 

*‘I definitely want to go bock to 
Seattle, but I hove to consider 

whcrc^I wont to be for the next 

seVen years "of my fife," Baker 
_ said. “That’s going to be based on 
my family and wljat I. think is 
important foe them. 

“Obviously, Boston is a place 
I'd love to play, simply because of 
where Pm from - Hanford - and 
.where my family and friends ore. 
But again, Seattle is the.place I’m 
hopefully looking forward to 
going back to.” 

Reports surfaced late in thb 
week that the Celtics and 
" Mavericks were discussing a 
and-rnide deal that tvoiiud send 
Mercer to Dallas for Samaki 

—VWkemndirfunirffNori pick; 

Boston also ivas wQfiiig' to listen 
to almost any offer for Kenny 
Anderson, while Golden State 
was willing lo take-back virtually - 


offered him'a deal worth only 
Sl.l million after he mode S3.3 
- million last season. 

Oakley, miffed that the Raptors 
liavcn't markedly improved th eir 
~origiHal offer"orS12 million for 
three years, could be involved in 
n sign-and-trode deal for 
Hardaway. Reports in Torortto 
said die Raptors were con.sidcring 
offcring_Qokley end -Tracy - 
McGrady to Orlando for 
Hardaway. 

Oakley also has been courted 
by. the Lakers and Atlanta 
Hawks. 


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Inflation watch: 

_ Emplo>Tn cntCcsc ' 

Index takes c«n ter scigc 
I on W^l St reet. PagejD4 



: .. YoufBusincss' .02 . . 

- Career Moves . .05 • 

. . . . •; . Classified ...... D7-E10 


'he .TimesrNews 


Sunday, August I, 1999 








A cfop^lult8r pilot, working for SproyCraft, rlio* off an alfalfa *oed field In Jerome County In a SpO-honepower OrunUnon Ag-Car oftor ipraylng the flold with poetlelde. 




-IVIagi&ValleyVaeiial---- 

' applicators face ' "jf WIN FAlii's - Their 

. . ' : H .customers don’t have an 

increasing pressures 1 «tra dime to spend. 

^ . ■ Regulations, develop- 

in short earning season ?,rbLms^rcS‘f;ir.'il 





4-^ 


re up 

no of hit pllota nudteo a- pats ovar a field o( sugar beets, Bob ' a^j j {“g ^ ^ " 
n, owner of SprayCraft In Jerome, monitora wind speed on the right now," 
to ensure i good drop of herbicide from hit 301 Air Tractor. ' ~ Kenny Owings 
' said. A former 


Dust to dust 

‘Airiil'a^plication Tsivt the ' ~ 
same business It was a few 
decades ago. Irt 1955, 
Ke^ny Owings used to haul ' 

Piper Supercub. Now his 
=gilOiaJiaul 4 Q 04 allonaJn a . 

Grumman Ag*Cat. 

Pilot Bob Newsom's planes 
fly ove^flelds at about 110 . 
mph, camying 2,000 to 3,000 
— pout>dS;'The biggerplanes— 
are much mors etqJensIve - — 
. but rnore efllcl ent. B oth men 
■ are seeing lewer email 
fa'rmers among their ’ 
customers, they 'say.- - . 


~ m Newsom, who ,hS 

or, oron ( going lo spond 

■— plo.oo -o,o.ho.Uin g .hl.— 

Several years of low isnoca^task. 

■ prices have mode farmers * i„ ' 

cautious, “but they suu , Tougn enterprise 
need to fight insects, com ‘ Newsom’s'eareer as a 

troi bli g ht and hovejin corporate pilot, trnps:_ 

In teliigent wce'dinidnagc- ' p'orting the business 
menrprogram," said pilot world's money-makers.’ ‘ 



in beet Herds, aphids in 
the hay and green peach 
aphids in the potatoes. 
Aedvity is slower in spuds 
- his primary income - but 
if blight shows up in local 
fields this:year It .will 
mean serious business. 

As long as farmers 
dioosu aviation as a pcsti 
ddc tool, survival i s posd 
ble for'tbc valley’s crop- 
dusters. 

“Each of us hove about 
all we can do,” said 
Newsom, who said the 


wWork begin* at dawn for Curt Frodin, a College of Southern Idaho studont who i* working hli third * ummor preparing ei 
loading the pianos' ehomleal paytoadi a* thby make their round* In the cool morning hours. 


Bob Newsom, -whoso- 
-■SpniyCnifroperQiIb trir 
-based in Jerome.— 

The farmers'he does 
' business .wlth, Kewsom 


world's money-makers,' 
s parked , a ch ange- to 
I'nvcstraient banking. 

.During his stint.in bonk- 
ing, he sow what seemed 
an attractive opportimity 


in aerial application. 

“l*thoughnhcre'd‘ be~ 

about 0 20 percent profit 
-zjnjfeft:.dejtliijJie;aaltLJici4 
was in fora surprise. ' 

Lost year, his profit was 
7. percent of gross rev- 
enue. ■ 

“I’d like it to be double 
_thai,J)uuhaL’sjieaijty.”- 
, .Newsom said. “It's a li^ii 
' business.” . 

-Hi* customers poySG.SO 

to S8 per acre for dicmic^ 
opplicoHorir~and~Cb^lS ' 
quickly chlp_nwny..thaL.. 
revenue. 


Fuel runs about 575 per through the numbers. PiMhwhw 

houflmhe aIrplltrSfflUl Huliwa^through this ^ ” 
Total operating costs - year's June*,through- DSPlH 

-raueh-.ttsAiehandcoik-^.mrp —.-A-uruscamivlng se ason: n nuialft~ 

about 5120 per hour, and Newsom hos blllcd cuP VoWalu 
that doesn't include Insur* tomers for only a third of 
’ ance, maintenance, pilot . last year's total billing 
wages or periodic replace* • “And that’s causing me • ■ ' 

mcni of costly plane parts. lo.rcach out and mkc new 
- Or- the- occasional crash or customers,:'-New50m-6ald< ' ' 

' downed power line. To' offset liigh fixed costs, 

Insurance alone costs he’s trying to generate 
$7,PQQ nnHunll y_ffir- n: m arB.b imnnecih y-ygf^pr.- ; — ^ 


plane that is used 300 to 
' aOOhours each year. 

“li’s not a lot of fun," he 
said while running 







rr*’’V' - 


Pilot Tom Oeoll makoa a.1i«nMnf turn to got In lino for hta noxt pais on'a flild In Joreme County. 


_morii:bu«nctg:by.accept-~- 
ing smollcr jobs farther 
'away for his'eompohy’s 
twoploR^. ..... •: — 

Applicators in Jerome 
and Twin Falls fly to jobs 
from Picabo to Rogerson, 
and from Bell Rapids to 
' " Hazelton; he said. But foil 
' dlpsthelrwlngs. •• 

Racing for revenue ' 

■When Owings’ '.May-'— 

. expires, there is no moro- . 
revenue yo. wring 'out of 
• iheVear/He locksTip*hls • 

' planes in the hangar. They 
'can’t be used legally for 
'any other dtirpow. 

“If yoii don't have oops, — - 
you don't work,” he said. 

A few in the industry _ 
monage to Work more” 
months of the year by. 

Please see AERIAL. Page 03 






Upsc ale-ant iques shop, 
opens in downtown TF 

TWIN FALLS - Downtown 
Twin Falls is hccoming more of 
-a:dcsr^^arton'f^)^^1llti<|ll^;‘s}|■oY)~ 
; ping. ' 

A new, upscale shop, Tan- 
ner’s Anii(|iies. opened its 
diMirs July 2 at 

I -.320 Main Ave. 

N.. bringing' 
the number -of 
shops to five 
on Main Ave- 
' mic alone. 


Y waftatawtb a woeWf feature Pleass &fiialMtems to Busloe^ ~ 

Tbe ThioWatrewa n ti to heat about I t I — 1 Ofcertacthefa t 

• PiWTWiofts and sialf chances, - 

• Ncwccrt.ncaiK)ns. 

• Scfftnars and workshops. 

• Awfdsandachftcmcnts. r„ ,,, 

• ChatitaWc txjsiness actiuiics. {330931. Ea. 242- 


ESU will sponsor leadership 
seminar at Twin Falls hotel 


sttoodOno: Noon'RundayfwpuUicatioR.t>wfoOowbcS<nlay. 


Tanner, both souiliern Idaho 
_ natives, recently moved from' 
the Reno and Carson City, 
Ncv., area, where they also . 

operated'an antique business. 

Tanner's Antiques occupies 

- the English Group building 
^^wiili a large showroom; in die 

. bIbcl<'hor,lK brCaTn’s Home 

- Furnishings. In addition to buy- 
ing and selling, Tanner's also 
does consignments. Call 736-' 

- 3300. ■ 

' “ rhe goal of the new shop is 
to provide experienced and car- 
ing service along with o wide 
variety of quality antiques and 
collector’s items for tlie com- 
munity and those visiting our 

■ . area." a neivs release .said. 

Muggers Brewpub wins 
-- rfiatlonaJ gold medals 

■ TWIN FALLS - Twin Falls 


. Ty and Jan j masierat Muggers. 


This was. a competition 
between commercial brew- 
* cries and brewpubs to award 
gold, silver and bronze medals 

f or excellence in bre win g . 

Medals were awarded in 33 
categories with about 300 
entries received - incliidinp 
entries from large breweries 
such as Anheuser-Busch, Sain 
Adams, Full Sail and 
Deschutes. In 1998 the Twin 
Falls company >von tlircc golds 
and two silvers. In "97 it won a 
silver and nvo bronzes. ' 

■Twin Falls Brewing prod- 
ucts are' available to retail 
. accounts tlirou^i Magic Valley 
Distributingat 733-3S3S. 


Solutions, Food Costs” for 
sales associates in Nevada, 
Oregon and Idolio. 

Food costs are a top concern 
of rc.staurani owners, a press 

re lcase-from Bu rgess said , 

With a typical 4 percent profit 
margin, restaurant owners wiio 

gel black ink, not red. 

Burgess. f^iJs^^aled with' 
the lack of practical informa- 
tion, wrote the 20-page book- 
let with Adella Stnufrar ns an 
tn-liouse guide for staff at 
Elmer’s Pancake and Steak 
House: 

The ’‘no-theoiy, no-buIl, no- 
nonsense” guide was co-spon- 
sored by the United Dairymen 


BOISE - A .Leadership 
Challenge Seminar will be held 
_ from 8:3^0_a.m>tq_Sp^mrOct. 19 
at the Double Tree Hotel 
Downtown, 1800 Fairview Ave. 

The seminar is sponsored by 
the. Center for Management 
..Jlcyelopmont-ihroiigh Boise " 
Slate University’s College of 
Business and Economics in 
cooperation with The Tom 
Peters Co. 

Ifeyd Clarke, cliief executive 
o fficer of Tom Pe t ers, will be 
“the instructor. Cl^kc has 
taught corporate leadership 

_concep ts jind-skills .to.exccu- 

- lives in 20 countries. Clients 


groups 

_ _ - f. X o_m_ 

AT&T, Arby's, Citibank, IBM, . 
Kodak, Motorola, 

LensCrafters, 3M and VISA. 
He is a three-time entrepre- 
neur and was vice president of • 
sales and markcting*for^m, a 
■ news rdca.se said. > — 

The event will be presented 
in five categories: orientation, 
challenging the process,' inspir- 
-jQfi.a_&hacc(Lyision,_enQblinfi_._ 
others to' act, modeling the 
way, encouraging the heart 


for those in leadership roles 


_42&386Lorscnd c-tnail to cmd 

mfo@boisestate.edu. 


Irrigation Associanon prepares for show 


“Our local microbrew'ery ( of Idaho, the rdeasc said. 


continues to brew liigh-quoliry 
products, and they show-quite— 
. .well in.ourjnarkcu.ofien.out-— 
selling more popular, national- 
• ly known micros,” sales manag- 
er Mike Bloxham said. 


SYSCO, United Dairymen 


Tom Morgan, chief exccu- 

live officer nf J . 

in thc-rclcasc: “We.wcrc- 
plcascd to partner with the 
United Dairymen of Idaho as 
part of ‘June is Dairy Month’ 
and make this casy-tp-rcafl 
booklet with a common-scn.se 
_ approach to managing (^pens- 
— 'us-availahltt-Yo 'ouiv-cuV-^ 
tomers.’" . 

“Hie restaurant business is 
very competitive; you have to 
make profits happen - there'' 
are altvays excuses,” said 
i Burgess, who also sold riglits to 
I 1,000 copies of the booklet to 
. hospitalicy-motcriDls publisher 
Atlantic f^blisliing. 

The Simple Solutions. series 


IDAHb FALLS - The 2000 
Idaho Irrigation Equipment 
Show will be held jan. 12-13 at ’ 

. the Shilo Inn Convention 
Center. Booth sci-up day for 

— vendors is Jan-11. 

ApplkationsJo.display will 

be mailed Sept. 30, first to 
Idaho Irrigation Equipment 


A-ssodation members and tlicn, 
two weeks later, to nonmem- 
bers Companies wanting infor- 
madon about becoming a mem- 
- ber of the UEA ($80 annual 
dues) or an applicadon should 
moil a postcard to the ossoda- 
-donrP;O.-Box-190483,-Bo»erID-^ 
837194)483. 

Free classes will be available 
' in addidon to the 65 booths on 


display. Classes are arranged 
by Howard Ncibling of the 
University of Idaho. Class sug- 
gestions and volunteer speak- 
ers may call Ncibling at 736- 
^1. 

For morc'information, call 

-^htrshowrchairmenrtan'ce^ 

Eldridgc of Rain for Rent at 
522-4500, or Trevor Walker of 
Funk Irri^don at 522-3703. 


Magic Valley (^omputer.entcrs merger-. 


local favorite, Fall Down 


TWIN FALLS - Trilogy 
Network Systems Inc., a, com- 
puter network services compa- 
ny in Idaho and Utah, 
announced a merger with 
Magic Valley Computer 
Systems of Twin Falls. 

Trilogy provides business 
management software and ser- 
vices to physiaan groups; den- 
— to]*praciices,-lnw-firms and 

throughout the intermountain 
region with focus in Idaho and 


Utah. Magic Valley Computer 
provides a range of computer 
services for customers through- 
out the Magic Volley and Mini- 
Cassia. 

The merger will benefit cus- 
tomers of both companies, a 
Trilogy ^ress release said. 

With its reputation for sup- 
port and services, Magic Volley 
Comnutor h ns deyelo ned a I 

strongdicmbosc. ' " 

— Howevorr'Lynh'Huriler; 

— fouitder-and-c»-ew n e r, wa s 

determined to provide 'on even 
greater list qf products and 


services, the release said. 
Merging with Trilogy allows 
Magic Valley Computer’s 
large customer !»sc to take 
advantage of Trilogy’s expand- 
ed services and increased 
manpower. 

Magic Volley Computer pe^ 
sonncl will stay on wjth Trilogy 
and continue to work with cus- 
-tomitrg- 

. ' P hone linos wil l ring at 

’Tnlbgy, so cu stotnera canreaA 
"bCFih'Trilogyand'MiFBIc Volley " 
Computer by dialing 7356100, 
orbyfaxat735-118& 





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Money 


NYSE-eritertains plm tQ ^end-trading-h 0 urs to4i a 


Th« PallM Morning Nawi 

i-'rank Zarb, head of the Nasdaq stock 
market, speaks conndcntly about the com- . 
ing of ni^ttime stock trading. Investors 
. want it, he ays. He'll give it to them. 

And online-trader-AJan'Schwartz of~ 

Flower Mound wants it. Swartz and his 
wife often have trading ideas at ni^t 
that they would like to act on, but they 
have to wait until the ne« day. They can 
- put orders in at nicht. but they’rc.not_ 
executed until the next day. 

"Often you will put a buy order in at 
ni^t. but it can jump past your trading 
point before it ever opens in the morn- 


ing,'' said Schwartz, who sells real estate 

-duringtheday.-- - ‘ • 

"A lot of my friends who have normal 
S-to-5 Jobs would love to cr'^ide at night. 
And look at the West Coast.'This will be 
normal hours for those people.” 

— Sometime next year.Tthe Schwartzes ' 
arc likely to get their wish. Both'ihe New 
York Stock Excluingc and Zorb's Nasdaq 
have said they plan to extend the trading 
day beyond its current dosing hour of 3 
-pm. JJallas time. Under one proposal dis- — 
cussed by NYSE offidals, stodts could be 
traded as late as 1 1 p.m. 

Buying and selling stocks at night 
sounds simple enough. But potcndolly it 


affects evcrj’thing i r om zfae j-lticTTi f jrxs' 
of stocks jind the way j mimul ,oiinh 
panics compute the net rtHtua vuilie of 
their funds to howDow j)tmes&Cn.cinn>- ■ 
putes its stock indexes. And inr imibsid- 
uol investors, it represents Ji j-him.-v mi 
“play on die sumcSeldiidfli^iclHiginiHiP 
rutionol investors undinmuieiasidksjcai 
more convenient time , td'daj-. 

"The murkets ore in n -sune <,tif emaliih 
,tion right now because imithiiiiiitD ‘ 
invest nrs-haveltecomemudimtevTRms'- 
ful,” said Bill Bumluim. tniline ihrukcsaipe 
analyst for Credit Suisse iPirKi Boinim. 
“It’s much litc some 4is ibuiiks leinmiiiiiij; "" 
their hours when people let m Ibe linuwis 


diac they wanted to bank later." 

One of the first issues that the stock 
exdumgiei. mumol fund companies and 
uefaers in the industry must resolve is 
w hen- tn compute the closing prices of 
_smi^ a^3 p.m., when the market now 
cibma Sir the day. or at'9 p.m'.,. after the 
dbaeofafiKrhnurs trading? ' 

This a£he:ts die dosing values of the 
sfflclc exdiangtei. the net as.sec values of 
tnu tual hmiis and even the relcvmice of 
-riie'studcnbies arrd indexes published in' 
diiily new.spapers. 

ouc certain yet, but the con.sen.sus 
in che securiries indastry is that after- • 
houEs- nades would be considered the 


Aerial 


- Continued from 01 

crop-hopping from area to' area, 

‘‘Burthai**-prcny^ewTjnd'for~ 

between," he said. 

Newsom’s two pilots and'threc 
''"ground-suppon'people'are all. ~ 
seasonal workers. While their 
boss winterizes, rebuilds and 
deans his planes and collects on 
accounts, his workers drive spud 
trucks, go to school or get other 
jobs. 

Of Owi^' field man, mcchon- 
, ic, four pilots, seven ground crew 
members and two secretaries, 
just a couple stay on year-round. 
His daughter, one of the'sccrc- 
tones, teaches school. 

"The r est o f th em gojhcic— 
way,” he said. 

Encountering turbulence 

While they race the sun, the 
valley’s oupdusters don’t always 
have a smooth ride. 

Flying is easy, Newsom said. 

• "The-hard pan is complying‘with" ~ 
state and federal rcguladons on 
such issues as aircraft licensing 
■ or pestiddc' disposal, and main- 
taining favorable public relations 
in the community. 


viewed or plibtographcd. 

Applicators in the post couple* 
of years have made big capital 
investments for chemical contain- 
~~~ nrefltrNet^-nrSaid.-Eo^ opera- 
tion at the Jerome airport has its 

own-fadlities-for-rinsing-and-stor — 

ing empty chemical containers.' 

Rural residents complain 
about early-morning spraying, 

but-tbatls.whcn-wind-condidons — 

ore best and potato plants aren’t . 
yet wilted by heat, Newsom said. 
Some insecticides must be 
sprayed veiy early or vco' late in 
the ^y to avoid harming bees. 

' Homes ore crowding doscr to 
.Adds, making it harder for pilots 
to get near their targets, he 
added. A worker on the ground 
has to alert neighbors and keep 
bicyclists and the like away from 
the fields - and that’s an 
increased cost. 

Dairies arc taking over a lot of 
agricultural land on both sides of 

the Snake River, Owings said , 

and pQols'must take care not to 
let chemicals drift over to the 
cows. 


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When conducting nationwide job h unt, 
remember cost-of-living, other factors 


. The Ofwiga County Ragrtw 

Ever luve b pal take the big 

job for the big bucks in the big 

drj% only to hear him or her later 
complain that the money was 

n e v e r ri^t? 

^ Just like crossing foreign bor- 
ders often means new-coins and- 
bills - plas new currency conver- 
sions - monng cros-vcoumry, or 
even within the state, can alter 
sixir fmandal situation. 

Kow the U.S. dollar's good in 
all 5Q states, but its bujing power 
varies wildly throughout the 
land. And while you might be 
familiar with varying housing 
costs, that's not ihu only key 

household, cxpense.thot. fluciuv-. 

atM state by state and city by 
dry. 

_ _ As with many checkbook ded- 
"sioos, a national appiix^ 
to your job hunt means that 
hocnework is in order. So if you’re 
pondering pulling up stakes for a 
new job, pendl and pad - and an 
Internet hookup - should be 
handy. 

One cxmI Web silc to check is 
' Hotnefair, Which has a neat calcii- ~ 
lator that compares the cost of 
' living in various cities. These 
folks base their calculation on a - 


. formula that’s roughly one-third 
irousing expense; one-third utili- 
ties, consumablt^and transporta- 
tion; and one-thi^ other service 
costs. Taxes arc not included, and 
they can be significant. 

— -ThinirofTin^rapl 0 yee"arC 6 sia“ 
Mesa. 'Calif.’s Rockwell . 
— International pondcring-the rei»-- 
! cation offer to the company’s new 
home, Milwaukee. According to 
Homefair http://www.homcfair.- 
com/homefair/ciiir/salcalcJmnl a 
550,000 salary in Costa Mesa's is 
worth $68,862 in Wisconsin. 
Another relocation calculator, 
with far less cities to ponder, 
DataAIoster http'J/www.daiainas- 
lersxDR^cgi-bin/coLp! found that 
— SSOJOO in Im Angrlcs wafrwonb-r- 


— SSOJOO in Im Angrics wafrwonb- 
S54.G48inMUwSe 

Despite the fancy wuMht this is 
..no .precise- sdence. Aamto site, 
Mortgage Univm^cy http://at.« 
amo-mortgage.com/amo- 
scrfpts/caIcs/costonivihg.asp 
• breaks out some Une-by-line ojsts 
fortwodtics. 

Its comparison of Anaheim, 
Calif., and Milwaukee showed 
that while AnaheizD typically has 
pricier housing ($262,000 vs. 
SISS.OOO for a 2,000-S(]uace-foot 
house) and more expensive elec- 
tridty ($69 vs. $49 a month), back 


East youll pay more state inoome 
taxes ($2,894 in Wisconsin vs. 
$714 in California). 

Face iL Internet power aside, 
no two households are alike. 
Families w -ith children _can ha\-c 
an entirely different cost siixic-” 
ture than a single man or womaii 
— or even an ~older cou ple loolmig ' 
for a career-capping assignment. 

Situations vary widely. 
markets are friendly to renters. 
Others arc better for home buy-/ 
CIS. So housing performaiKS can 
tweak any one formula. 

IVoximity to fa^y can be a 
factorrlf"you^ennoving'away~ 
from dw dan and have Idds, have 
you lost valuable and- cheap 
— baby:«rong sorvicM? Are cross— 
' country jaunts going to put a 
dm in die famQy budm a 
big move is made? <V you mi^u 
be considering the converse; win 
you lower costs if you move bade 
near your old hometown? 

And did wc mention taxes? 
The more you make, the bigger 
the tax factor might b& 

Don’t forget the agnificance of 
prop<^ t a xes . Thw vary wid^* 
across the country and there's 
often little logic to it. But do 
check, since some 
in the country have very dwap 


bousing bu very faj^ pnpeny- 
taz hflh Ac oMdiu g to Mongage 
University’s Web site, the 
Milwaukee pr o pen y -m m 

tbe typoca] bexse (an abode tba t^ s 
S 104 .OQ 0 

Anaheim) wonld be $ 4,108 vs. 
SZ 382 in Calihnia _ 

'*As you can see. paiibing'dK 
Inggest bucks isn't xmiDe^t^ 
penny-smart. According to 
'Homefair, added l iiiug ^-vp*** *— 
for 

Viejo, Calif., for a job in 
Fzandsoo woold eat iq> aD €d a 20 
pe rCCTt ra ise; those expenses 
wauld« 9 e cot a 30 percent nme 
if tbe penoQ's new |dg woe in' 


is 100 percent correct- For 
instance, die wnoer of a near jab 
emrid twedc tbe firing am tabs- 
l a do n 'in their fanr by. am o ng 
other things, opdng for a long 
commute to dramatically cot 
housing ants. Bat doD^ fad yonr- 


. Homeofthejui^re 


Intel^fnier6pf()eessor 
may automate houses 


real costs — both financial »*»«< 


isn't tasg. It ■»* « ■» < ifaa 

a raise endd acmaliy be a pay 
can; or that a salaiy drop bb^b 
actually be a boons. 


PoIlrEmpIoyers expect salary negotiations when hinng 


als and job candidates culled were uncomfortable negotiating. It leaves you knoHine that m 
KdgwiaddefWewSeivteo from an online job seardieifs Usl Most job' hunters also tmded k* mn 

'.t Eighty-two percent of both the to focus on salary negotiation ftrmorenKmey.ButyanaKedoi 

_Qingratulationsr You have a : employer the_applicant iiMcad of probing for other a e p„. 

- job oOer. Just^’t assume it’ta - .group^considered-tho initial - fits sudi as more'vatationtime.a - cent or 10 petcsirnuR sa£r 

mke-it-orlcm'eit proposrio^ salary offer a starting point for signing bonus, eariy raise oppor- tm^beaHyaocanemea. 

mm modest negotiating nxon. ; counteroffers. tunidcs or relocation cost reim- Vn«t ai«yi w 

Obviously, you don’t want to Given that negotiation., is bursemenL you can't get me base ny trv 

alienate the employer so much expected, it appears that the ■ Even in a light labor market fr»- 

mat tte organization reRrets the human resource department has when, presumably, good appli- enm week of paid vacadac. 

job offer, but, according to a the upper hand. Seventy percent cants have me negotiating ed^ nnfW. ^ 

recCTt poll, some salary negotiat- • of the HR people said th^ were most HR depamnems are com- panypaid Yonll 

ing is expected. comfortable with negotiating, mined to cutting costs, the poll never Imow what yoo cmi ea if 

The Society for Human compared wim 3S percent of the showed AH candidate will have you don't try 

Resource Management and the job hunters, who said mey were trouble fighting the overwbdining 

online edition of The Wall Street onl y "somewhat comfortable" market pr»*«" ire to tng*»««» <Wi___fiwnc.StafSBLmittnfaBffjlK_ 

j^nal surveyed more than . wT* me process. And one out of porate pi^ts and te cta np^ri i ^ worMaee for The Knmta Gro 

1.000 human resource profession- five job hunters admitted they - So, where does that lem you? Star."' ' 


•• So, where does that leave you? Star. 


Take a l ook before leaping i nto emerging marke ts 


- Emerging market funds, only a 
year ago considered submerging 
funds, hare surfaced again M*im a 
vengeance, up 33 percent since 
the first of the year. 

But before you jump back in. 
listen CO someone who in>’csis in 
emerging markets for a living: 
“There seems to be a lot of 
manic-depression investing in 
emerging markets," said Rajee%' 
Bhaman, manager of 
Oppenheimer's Developing 
Markets Fund. 

"People gel m-crly cxdtcd and 
inx-est. then get overly depres-sed 
and there ore enormous swings in 


got into some funds rcaUy mat- 
ters. 

But if you go beyond the year- 
to-date numbers, you come up 
with some interesting findings. 
For example, while emerging- 
market funds arc up 33 percent 
from January, they ore iip only 13 
percent for the past 12 months. 
Latin American funds, up 25 per- 
cent year-co-dacc, arc stUl down 
5.4 percent in the past 12 months; 
Going the other way. Pacific 
region funds - with and without 
Japan in them - ore up in the 35 
percent to 42 percent range year- 
lo-datej but for the 12-tnomh peri- 
od. they’re up 42 percent to 60 
percent Their rccm-cry staned a . 


past 12 months, and about 80 per- 
cent this year so far. But the 
Korea fund was $2 a share on 
June 30, after being $652 a year 
earlier. It was $730 June 24, gal- 
loping back from that $2 price. 
Quitearide. 

Rush’s economy now is based 
on oil prices, higher now as Aaa 
recovers but depressed during 
the Asian crisis, said Ladngtoo 
managing director Lawrence 
Kantor. When the fund 
he said, “We envisioned volatili- 
ty. but we didn’t expea to see it 
move op so quickly,.aad again we . 
didn’t expect the devaluation <rf 
the ruble and the default on 
debt," be said. 


And yd. none cf tfaas is noBD- 
al with enier;png«Baiket 
PauTMatfaews, who ^ ifae^ 

Korea fond, sa^ Korea mmd dm 


the fkwning of .is rirm-nn apao- 
ing to foreign in v e gm eot 


sons for tbe nnnarooDd. Bat, Im 
cautioned, "We vonld never 
ex p ect It to be a £ae 

from here om" 

It should also be noted that 
Korea and TMla are sm^ecDBD- 
fry ftinds;;wiud ara^be-soo— 
volatile of tbe 

funds because diae is oo way to ' 

read tbe risk amone other 



oork^aa fw The Kmm Gtp .1 ^ eaniry. " grid David Redelfs,_ aaoepomt 









TWIN FAILS -'Elha Cur-' 

■ [ ~ ' "j rulhere,' tnivCT 

- f*"/ Travel 'Assa- 

EUu Camithera cintc from the 
— Institute of - 
Certified Trovcl Agcnts in Wel- 
lesley, Muss. , . 

The CTA designation is the 
first level of professional recep- 
tion in ICTA's ttvo-lcvcl ccrtiHca- 
tion process. It exists for travel 
professionals who have made a 
personal commitment to enliance 
their level of professional prac- 
tice, a news release said. 


Camithers completed an educa- 
tional program featuring courses 
in sates and service, geography, 
communication and technology 
and travel-industry issues. Site 
has seven years' experience in 
the travel industry and has been 
with Desert Sun Travel since 
1994. 

TWIN 
FALLS - Dr. 
John Garrard, 
DDS, will join 
Dr. Kevin 
ILunblin, 1415 

N - Fill mnr f., ’ 

Suite 701, in 
family and 
John Garrard cosmetic den- 

tistry. 

Garrard is a native of Burley. 
He graduated from Dccio High 
-Schooland concinucd-liis cduca- - 
■ tion arUtoh'Statc University,- ‘ 

' graduating in 1995 with a bache- 
lor’s degree in. biology and a 
minor in chemistry. He recently 
mairiculntcd from the University 
of Oklnhoma, where he studied 
and, practiced techniques in co.s- 
mctic and restorative dentistry. 

He is married to Julie (Payne), 
and tlicy have one son, Jacc. 

New patients arc welcome to 



production 
supervisor at ' 
-ihc Gooding 
cheese plant. 
He lias been 
witli Avon- 
more since 
1997 and-was 
previously 
'senior lend 
man and relief 
supervisor at 
the plant. He 


EmploymentXlQstlndex^^ 
IfElWil^eenter-smge during-inflati watch 


priicr worked for Ixprina Foods ' ; OTallTnimSs. She" 


as u CToll-animul vete rinar y tech- 
nician and client advisor. She 
started her career in Salt Lake 
City, where she worked at 
AHHA-certified smail-animal 
clinics. She received training in 
small-animal and exotic-pet care, 
-radiology-and laboralory-iech— 
niqucs, as well as smull-knimal 
anesthesia and dental care. 

Fogleson, formerly associated 
with Addison Animal Clinic, has 
two years’ experience working 


in Roswell, N.M. 

.« Carl E. Bigler joined Avon- 
more West as lab supervisor at 
the Gooding whey plant. Most 
recently, he was a senior quality 
assurance associate at Leprino 
Foods in Denver, wlicrc lie earli- 
er was a research and food scien- 
tist. He is a graduate of 
Oklahoma State University, 
•whoro-ho-earned-a-boclielor^s- 
dcgrcc in animal scicnccs/food 
industries. 

* Sue Phillips was promoted 
from technician level III to 
rcscorch and 
development 
supervisor at 
Avonmore's 
Richfield facil- 
ity. An 
Avonmorc 
employee 
since 1990, 

- Phillips is now 
managing the ' 

Sue Phillips RAcD onalyii- 


uate of the College of Southern 
Idaho' with an associate of arts 
degree fn Equine Studies, and 


NEW YORK (AP) - The 
Employment Cost Index might 
have been a mere blip on Wall 
-Street tickers Tltursdny-hut-for— 
one important factor: Alan 
Grccn-span was tvalcliing. 

The chairman of the Federal 
Reserve considers the ECI a cni- 
cial elem ent in his watch over 
inflation. So-vHien the Commerce- 
Department reported Thursday 
that the index rose 1.1 percent in . 
the second quarter, well above 


she is a ci;nini..<i animal dtmsMr ' ° 5?'"' 

,oiiaf(EARS,vota.m..,. ■ 

TORLEV.- Assan is 

Analysts called llie <ie»off an 
colors at Jenn s Hair Jun^e in overrcactibn. But morket watch- 

^ — mcjack-of er, 

F I r -s I the Labor Department began 
.Impressions, tracking in 1975. has taken on for 


relief (EARS) volunteer. 

•• BURLEY - Jennifer Asson is 
specializing in the latest cuts and 
colors at Jenn’s Hair Jun^e in 
the-hack-of— 

. Impressions. 

Asson com- 
pleted her 
cosmetology 
iroining at 
Mr. Juans, a 

S'r'i’’"”: 

School. -and 
has additional training as an 
instructor, OPI advanced work- 
shop and advanced training with 
Gary Gerard’s International 



greatei — significance— since — for-cxira$-nke“vacotions“a’rid 


I... sis one-lime nature of many employ- 
Wall Street week In review . ce benefits. Milllon-dollar 
* Christmas bonuses, paid to .Wall . 

Streeters can skew the ECI; so 

— ThcEeiis-considenaThtrbcsi — /?bt»'o“com|Pany’s"yecrsroh"lo~ 
measure of changes in tvages and change managed hcaJch-carc 
benefit costs because it accounts providers. 


Greenspan took the helm of the 
Fed in 1967. 

"It's Greenspan’s favorite num- 
ber," said Ian Shepherdson, chief 
U.S. economis'i at High 
Frequency Economics Ltd. in 
Valhalla. N.Y. By contrast, econo- 
mists said. Greenspan’s predeces- 
sor Paul Volckcr favored money 
supply growth as a gauge of inna- 
tionary pressures. 

Back in the early 1980s, when 
Volcker’s Fed regularly raised 


'Shephetdson satdlhc second- 


signing bonuses It has taken on> . quarter ECI figure, the largest 
added weight in the tight labor quarterly rise since, the economy - 


vising several projects and serv- 
ing as on RAD representative on 
the company’s business develop- 
ment committees. In addition to 
earlier rcscardi and development 
duties, Phillips also has experi- 
-once in production and quality 
'assurance.' 

Avonmorc West employs 385 
people at its four Magic Valley 
locations It is the largest produc- 
er pf cheese and whey pfoduciii 
in the Northwest, a company 
press release said. 


Hn.-m > rvu ruiicu »n« lear is inai me rising onu quarter, ana i minx pernaps 

1-lab, -super- A i. c_uaiLLUiuo^CciitcCj inieresi-raies-when monetary wages-rrill mean higher pric e s ; an'avcragc ofThetwo'vrauld bc'a' 


market of the current economic 
boom. a.s companies offer bigger, 
more lucrative compensation 
packages in an effon to hold on 
to highly skilled workers 
With the U.S. uitcmploymcnr 
rate touching a Z9-ycar-Iow this 
year, there is pressure on employ- 
er; to reovit and keep workers, 
wlticli pushes up wages 
The fear is that the rising 


emerged from recession in 1991, 
hit the market especially hard 
. because it followed a paltry 0.4 
percent gain in the first quarter. 
Botii figures, lie argues, may have 
been off.kiltcr. 

“The first-quarter numbers 
were bizarrcly weak," he said. 
"Thai led economists to be ioo 
cautious in forecasting the sec- 
ond quaner, and I think perhaps ' 


She earned a first and a second 
place at the 1998 April 
Extravaganza competition. She is 
preparing for the Rusk Creative 
Colorists awards and- the NXT 
Team Expo in July and August. 

; — She can bc'rcachcd at 677- 
4229. 

TWIN FALLS - The Times- 
News announced the hiring of 
Michael Joumce as chief of the 
newspaper’s Mini-Cassia bureau. 

Journec will head the bureau’s 
news operation, assign and edit 
news articles and be involved in 
community events and isracs. He 


^owth exceeded targets, many reviving inflation, 
traders set their wristwatch Since Greenspan first pledged 
alarms each Thursday so they ■ .to act “promptly and forcefully” 
wouldn't miss the weekly after- - to combat inflation by raising 
noon release of the money supply interest rates if necessary, any 

data. ' sign of inflation has indicd wor- 

- The-goal thenrwhen double- - yies-on Wall Street.'But the steep,; 


He is married to Julie (Payne), RUPERT —Dr. Bill Williams. operation, assign and edit 

and tlicy have one son, Jace. Dr. Todd Slusscr and the staff of t>t>ws articles and be involved in 

New patients are we lcome to th e Fami ly Vision and Eye Care community events and issues. He 

■5 — ;-ealHor-an appointmem ji.735^ Cllnl<::nttcndcnl"tlnrjnlyri5ri:7 has-spcnrtouryearsin'jouprat" 

1415. I - - Northorn-Rockies Optomctric ism ns u news editor and manag- 

, . Coi^ercnceinjockson, Wyo. ing editor of two weekly publica- 

TvVlN- F AbbS - A vonmorc Tne-eon f erence- p ro vi des-elini- tlonS'lnTexas; 

West .rniouiiccd Ihcsc luring, cal and professional continuing. Joiuuoo can be reached in me 

E and promo- education courses for doctors of m:„! n..— 

dons: opcomenj from Idaho, Montana, 

Sean Wsomin^d-SO-olhei^sIatcsrthc " s>^:imuLto 

Walsh has dinic's news release said. . mjoumce@magicvaIlcy.com. 

joined The conference is a regional 

Avonmorc program by the American Opto- TWIN FALLS - Twin Falls 

West as direc- eerie Association and provides Brewing 

tor of whey cducatiori by the Coundl of Opto- Co./Muggers 

operations. He ' metric Practitioner Education. . Brewpub wcl- 

previously was The program induded 19 hours ^HK'. comes Charles 

associate of education in developments in Frokc os Its 

.SeanWabn director of eye diseases and trcauncni, opio^ newmanaget. 

commercial operations for WycUi _■ metric speakers and exhibitors Frokc 

Nutritionals in Georgia, Vt., " with the latest in ophthalmic | aiiond#*d th^ 

where he supervised the compa- industry information and tcdutol- UnivCT^y of 

Wisconsin- 
ChnrlMFrabft Stout and 


dipt inl^tion was a drag on the 
economy, was for the Fed to pro- 
vide enough money to keep the 
economy growing without over- 
heating. 

Tbc Fed is still trying to keep a 
lid on inflation, byt is a lot less 
mechanistic about its policy 
moves. It still needs an indicator 
of inflationary pressures. 


'scllthg promptetTby the ECi was 
overdone, analysts say. 

"This index is very volatile,’’ 
said Gary Thayer, chiaf econo- 
mist at A.G. Edwards fis^ons in ' 
St. Louis. "It often spikes up one 
quarter and down the next, so I 
don't think the Fed will react to 
just one quarterly number." 

The volatility stems from the 


better gauge of where we arc in 
wage pressures.” 

^deed, the average of the first * 
quarter and the second falls right 
in line with the average 0.8 per- 
cent quarterly ^ain of the past, 
^thi'eeryoars.^ a,pcriod in‘wliichi _l~r 
inflation bccaihc nearly obsolete, 
corporate profits thrived and 
stodc markets soared. 

Since it's a quarterly figure, 
and a gauge of past activity, some . 
economists caution against plac- 
ing too mudi stock in the ECI. As ’ 
stunning as it was, it won’t come 
around again for another three 
months. 


lROHND THE WATER eO0tER 


Tha AMoctotad Frets Ohio, firm that once they hit 

their monthly produedvicy gbal^ 

■ LO’T-CLICK IF YOU THINK they "could go home at 2 p.m. 

--HB’SGUILTYrYou can look for a ead^tc m ooirfor-thcTcsrof-the-- 

job over the Internet, buy things, month. 


commercial operations for WycUi _ 
Nutritionals in Georgia, Vi., 
where he supervised the compa- 
ny’s purdiasing, warchousc/iraf- 
fie and customer service opera- 
tions. Wliile in Vermont, he was 
active in many community orga — 
'nizations. Walsh is a graduate of 
the University College of Cork, 

M Ireland, where 

'liiudied' 

daily sdcncc. 

Kolscn was 
promoted to 
production 
.4 manager of 
Avonmore’s 

— -G-o-o-d-i-n-g — 

cheese 

KetrtKoUen He has been 
. with Avon- 
morc since 1988 and previously 
worked as a supervisor at the 
Twin Foils and Gtwding plants. 

• ilacvcy Brouburger, an 
Avonmorc West employee since 
1991, was promoted to production 
supervisor at the Richfield plant. 

_H(^is_the relief rapervis or , cover- 
ing bothdoy and swing $Kii(& 

• Joe Denison was promoted to 


Williams and Slusscr arc mem- 
bers of ihcTdaho Optomctric 
-Association and the Americtm-^ 
Optomctric Assoda tion. 


And long-lost friends - now, how 
about serving on a juiy? 

Dell Computer commissioned a 
• survey to find out what people 
want from their PCs and the 
Internet, and it seems that they 
believe cyberspace can help 
. them deal with some of life’s 
, dvic nuisances. 

Ninety percent of the 1,000 PC 
users surveyed want to be able to 
renew their driver’s licenses' and ' 


If the business has a productive 
week, everyone gets to go home 
early on Friday. Workers who 
meet goals get to set their own 
schedules. The company' says the 
policy helped it have its best year 
ever in 1998. , 


HELLO, ANYBODY STILL 
THERE?: Mutud fund investors 
with bu^ schedules may And it's 


^ obtaia o d — ^ bo able to pay parking and speed-— 

degree in hotel and restaurant 'ing tickets online. Looking at 


get new license plates over the — hatdlogetholdotaiundcompa- 
'internet. Seventy percent want to *’1' represent Mive by phone 


like. But in its July issue, three 
kinds of ice cream - Breyers 
vanilla and coffee ice cream and 
-ShopRite’S'Premium- vanilla-— 
win the rating. 

Best Buy indicates a product - 
high in overall quality and rela- 
tively low in price. The magazine 
tested 18 kinds of vanilla ice . 
cream, 17 kinds of chocolate, and 
six kinds of coffee. Haagen-Dozs 
got highest overall ratings for fla- 
vor and texture. 


STRINGS ATTACHEDiJf your 
idea of the perfect business is 
one. that could , combine a 
Beethoven sonata and the. 



Rita Sandberg Andraa Foglason 

TWIN FALLS - Twin Falls 
Veterinary Clinic and Hospital 
welcomes two people - Rita 
Sandberg, a veterinary techni- 
cian, and Andrea J. Fogleson, a 
veterinary assistant and client 
adviser. 

Sandberg, formerly associated 
"wlihrAddlson*AnliDai'CUnlc,'has“ 
more than 10 years' experience 


management. At UW-Stout, other civic duties, 78 percent 
Ciinrlcs held the sous chef posi- want to be able to vole in major 

miere fivc-slar restiuninl,. pereent Uiink llii.y diould be bbic 

srbduation, he »t his slehis on “"''Jf- 

die world of beer. The joltdoesn't soy how Ilus 

He fceeivedo degree in b.ew. "abd'Pl'sl.ed. 

ing science from the Sicbel *** 

.Institute of Technology in FLEX TIME PAYS OFF FOR 
Chicago, then iicadcd west. EVERYONE:- If you’re looking 

Frokc worked his way into the workers and you think your 

head brewer’s position at company doesn’t stand a 

Wasatch Brewing Co. of Pork big cotpornonns 

fi. L .L / “ J 1 • and their big benefits, you might- 

City. Utah, rhen found Ins way In be nble to and ke?p good |ie- 

. . ... P*c giving them some 

My goal is to bring Muggers to tune off, advises Inc. mogazine. ' 

the next level through new con- In its August issue, Inc profiles 
cepts and out-of-ihe-bbx ideas," Dawson Personnel Systems, a 
he said. familysnvned temporary naffing 

“Look to Muggers for new ag«>cy that gives emplc^ccs time 

-mcmisand special events such as — off Jor meeting work goals. . - 

Brewer’s Dinners." ' FOT example, -4hc owners told 

Brewers Dinners. the sales staff .at the Columbus, 


unless thev call bv.8 ojn. Eastern Internet, Inc. magazine may have 

timcwcckdays. ” wKat you’re looking lor 

Mutual Fund magazine sur- The magazine, which each- 
veyed 14 big fund companies and mOnth features a business that’s 


a 24-hour-a-day, seven-day-a- 
week phone operation. Most oth- 
ers shut down their' phones at 8 
pjii4 a few stay open till 9. 10 or 
11 pjn. 

The early dosing makes it hard 
for some California or Hawaii 
investors to get their questions 
answered. But the magazine says 
it finds that the companies work 
hard to be sure their phone reps, 
provide good service. 

••• 

RATING ICE CREAM: Con- 
sumer Reports readers are used 
to seeing the magazine ^vc its 
Best Buy bbcl to VCRs, vacuum 
dcaners, lawn mowers and the 


wKat you’re looking lor 
The magazine, which each- 
mOmh features a business that’s 

shop in the mid-Atlantic region in 
its July issue. The business 
includes a 2,200-sqiiare-foot 
store, about 30 different moders 
of violins totaling about 5350,000 - 
and pons to assemble violas and ' ' 
cellos. Now, if the ideq of actually ! 
assembling a violin makes you ' ' 
say, “I could never do that,” 
there is nothing to fear. Inc. says 
the two skilled owners of the 
store, who arc moving on to other 
oppommitics, arc willing to help 
teach a budding entrepreneur 
how to build a violin. 

If this is too low-tcch for you, 
the shop also has a sophisticated , 
computer system to help you ‘ ' 
track sales trends and inventory. '' 


. Aia • CAO , HAtM • tOI'SS • rOIIKCS - OAllV/AV 


(LSoutfLlfiisMnteK.. 



Copy Pro 

A ►'Full .Sm-ikc r.TiJv i ‘c 


735-9793 I 


AIR • CAB • HOItl - lOUBS • CPUISES • BAIIWAV 


Magic Valley Bank 
— Annouhees-SeGond-^Phase^^f^^ 
Common Stock Offering 

Jo>y 23,’ 1 999 — - IWio Falb.-idtho — Magic Valley Bank anno un ced today' 

that it is in Ihc second phase oriheorTcring 01337,500 sljara ofiis common. 
Slock. The shares Mcre 'nrit 'ofrer^ excluslvdy id the'shareholden of the 


Dank in .Ihc first iduw of the orfering which expired on Ju ly 3. 10 99. The 
socond phase of tne ofienng is open to the g en eral public and will expire ai 
5:00 ptn Mountain Daylight Time on September I, I999runlewextm^ by - 
the Biuik in Itssole discimon. . ' - . 


The purchase price 6f ihc common slock is SI 3.00 per share 'and the shares 
are being ofTcred by the Dank on a best etTons basis wiihoui the services of 
an undcTwriicr. 

Marie Valin Bank is an Idaho state-chartered community' bank'~tKai~ 
proviocs a fUll range of banking. services to individual and corporate 

-cusiomersprinclpolly-in the south centraMdahoarea.— 

, The^common stock is being olTcred only by means ofon Offering Circular 
andih i c ann o un ccincnt isi^itheranoflcrioscll norasolicUaliondfBn'on’er 
to bi^. Copies oflhc Offering Circular can be obtained from Majpe. Valley 

For Further Infonnatlon Please Call 

MAdCVALLEY 


People you can bank on 

-- 222 Shoshone Street East • TWin Falls • ’ 

736-2400 iSSEI 








IdahoAVes'f 


Utahriirefighter learns 


- LOGAN, U««li (AH)— FormorcT 
(}i>in a (iccadc, Scoit Bushman 
has taught people how lo fight 
-fires in American forests aiid' 
wildlands. 

. liarlier this summer, however, 
Bushman went to Kussian 
forests to teach Americim-style 
firefighting. While lie was there, 

Logan Ilotsliots, a Forest Service 
crew that travels nruuntl the 
country each summer fighting 
fires, also learned some'new"' 
techniques himself. 

Since 199G, Busliman has host- 
ed a pair of Russi.-tns on his crew 
each year. This year, they were 
his_hosts,.._ 

■Jiic Russian-AmerVean Inter- 
nationiil Firefighting Exchange 
, Progrttm started shortly after 
the hreakup'of the Soviet 


—Union. The piogt.imira'cnapcr-. 
ative hetwceii llie U.S. Forest 

, .Service's Intermouniain 

Region, based in Ogden, and 
the Avialesookhrana (Aerial 
i'orest I'rtiteciion) in Pushkino, 
Russia. 

“They're kind of developing 
crews htised on the way we have 
-crew£,-uKinHour-equi|>mciiti— he— 
said. "It’s different. Basically, 
the strategies are the same, the 
tools are real different. I learned 
■■thiit.'in a’ lo.l of casesTtliey' might” 
be better." 

• A' crew of-velerjui Russian 
Tirefigitters tauglit him that. 

"These guys show up and they 
•iook liku—suinutliing out- uf.iliu— 
Stone Ago,” he .said. 

They cut a line in .the ground 
|o stop an advancing fire the 
same way most Cadie Valley 


rzifeisidcnts-wotild cut and roli sod.- 
Thc ground,, he explained, is a 
kind of permafro.st with a layer 
of peat. 

'('eteran Russian firefighlers 
usually drop from n lielicoptcr 
with n bag of shovel heads. Tlicir - 
first job is to find large sticks to 
iv'hillle into handles before they 

— ca»» g«> lo work. 

Where Americans miglii use 
special tools to sivat at small 
flames along the edge of a fire , 

~ Russians ii-Ut pine'lirdhchcs. 
"They’re completely, different 
from Amcricitns. But; 1 tell you, 
you gel out there and you work 
and it makesTi-lot of scn.se." he 
^iid-.^'li.t»oR-us-a-lona-tliiic-to— 
get ui»,io where wc could be as 
effective as those guys.” 

Bushiuan noted chat his crew 
was using 'American tools, c<|iiip- 


numi and tediniques.^ — 

.“These guys were Inugliing'nt 
us,” he said. “Our. guys were 
pretty down. After a day or tsvo, 
wc finally figured out how to use 
these new, fancy looLs. Once' tve . 
-got going,'wc could ouicui those” 
guys. TItey got a little concerned 
about that." 

— But-theyTwcro'friondlyrcvon~ 
to the fir.st American they had 
ever seen. 

- .“r‘L 9 Pj‘LO'^‘-* *r.‘here were^ so., 
-kind to mei" he said. “I was 
_amazed at.tlicir haspitality. They 
loved Americans." 

A handful of American fire- 
fighters participated in iKc. 
-exchange— this— year; -Most 
worked out of Kra.snojarsk, in 
Siberia, with Andre Eristov, 
who served on the Logan 
Hotshots ill 1997. Bushman, 


-however,- volunteered to train 
new Russian recruits out of 
—Vladimir, -near-Moscow. - — 

He was allowed to separate 
from tlte other Americans 
because he spoke a little 
■Russian - something he had 
; picked up from cln.<»cs in Cache 
Valley since Christmas. When he 
“ranrinro-lnnguage-proble'ms; 
Bushman could also rely on a 
translation computer or Demitry 

I’rcshnikoy.'.onc jl_lhe_nrst 

Russian firefighters who served 
to servu with the Logan Hotshots --- 
inlg96.- 

But before he could pm out a , 
■forest fire, Bushman had to Icom 
the Russian way of gutting tu- 
ono: Rappelling down a. rope- 
from a helicopter. 

"They didn’t like my tech- 
nique," he .said. “They’re real 


fussy. I used to do a lot of moun- 
tain climbing and rappelling 
-nnd-stuffrso-I thoughrl was - 
going to ace this thing riglit out. 
My first jump down there I got a 
lecture. , . 

"They made it real dear," lie 
»iid, noting that proper Russian - 
form is f eet tog etlic r compar ed 
to his spread-legged American 
method. ’'Tlicy’re real firm, 
they're good trainers and they 
.don!t.mess.nrnund. You-do.ii.. 
their way or you don't do it at 
uU. - - 

“So I was kind of humbled • 
lliere," . . , , 

Bus hman’s trip was cut_shori_ 
'because' of a mii^p mtlT his visa^, 
which could not be extended.. 
But ho hopes to have an opponu- 
niiy to work with firefigtiters in ' 
Ra-Mia again. 


• Couple says 
canines teach 
them about life 

COCOLALL/\ (AP) - Tliey call 
ilicmselve.s Wtilf People, living 
- along the banks uf.Cuculalla 
L;ikc with 10 arctic and timber 
wolves that howl into tlic North 
Waho sky and deyour more than . 

54,000 worth of meat eacli year. 

Calf the Taylors a litUc bit dif- 
ferent, eccentric maybe, or a cm • 
al>ovc the rest. Cnisiiders or inno- 
vators on a mis.sion, pcrliaps. 

But one thing ill for certain: 

They lire passionately commitlod— 

— • — to.spendingiiidriiiireTracworcd'fd — 
the pre.servaiion, understanding 
and love of wolve.s. 

“They're teachers t)f1ife," 
Nancy Taylor .'add. “The Indians 
knew thin a long lime ago. We're 
just figuring it out." 

Planting them.selves in a little 
store 12 miles south of Sandjwim 
on U.S. Highway 95, they sell 
clothing and artwork witii wolf 
'de signs. Nancy and Bill Taylor- 

suy_tliey’d_rainer raise-wolves 

than cocker spaniels or jiara- 

koots-To-listen-to-Uiuin-ialkr-you — 

wouldn’t lliink tiiey h:id a 
chance. 

“Believe me, it's work, a life- 

tiine.otduvouoiiand-iitortrwnrk;'’ 

Nancy said. “It’s incredible and 
it’s wonderful and, it never 
stops." 

Forget the fact that three of 
ilicir wolves were in the Disney 
move, “While Wolves II," dial 
people fly in from all over lo talk 
with them and see their wolves, 
linn diey're trying to .■a.-t up Wolf 
People francliises around the 
country, or that their husine.ss is 
growing at an explosive niic. 

Forget even that they bottle- 
feed wolf pups in iheir.store 
while customers shop. 

Xhey’n-. tr>'ing tn educate tho 

world ftlxjut an elusive and mysti- 
cal species they believe is terri- ^ 

hly misundcrsiiwd. ] 


education center in America that 1 
. not just studies their behavior, > 
but teachers people about wolf t 

liybrids," Bill Taylor said. i 

Registered wiili the U.S. 
Deparimeni of Agriculture lo « 

exhihil, and licensed- wiilr the " 

Idaho Department of Fish and f 
Came, the Taylors have made • 

television ducumenturies, dis- * 

played their wolves at fairs, state 
• —paries, schools and wherever they “ 
can to teach people about these ° 
timid, intelligent creatures. 

‘ Teoclicrs call them, tour buses c 
and vans with disabled children s 

fill their parking lot, and third- ^ 

graders write, them letters. ? 

Slowly, the Taylors are getting * 

—their messoge ou t. • n 

You would think that after a 
day of the constant stream of peo- ' - 




Bill Taylor ploys with a throe-weok old Arctic Wolf pup at his Cocolallo gift shop o 
pic and questions that going like having a few aquarium.s 
home would.be like entering a around ibe house or watering 
sanctuary. But after tJic last cus- rose bu.slies. 
turner Icavc.'s the receipts tire lal- "This isn’t for everyone,” Bill 
lied and the place is cleaned, the stiid. “A pure wolf is a pack oni- 

Taylor.s cart two wolves in a mnl. not a pet. As beautiful and 


caged pickup and head around 
the lake lo their home on 70 
acres. 

There, eiglit more wolve.s leap 


mnl, not a pet. As beautiful and 
as sweet as thby arc, raising 
wolves is about real work and 
real love." 

Not to mention the expense 


nnd howj.the-ininuic ihuy .puil.in and-commiimem of feeding them 

the driveway. Instead of a back a .specialized diet of raw turkey 

net arid swing set, the Taylors backs at more than S350 a month, 

have five wolf cages and a 5-acrc Wolves require raw meat for 
pen whore the animals can run. liieir digestive systems, but some- 


iU,S.HI]^way95. 

“Owner abuse is rampant,” 
Nancy Taylor said. “People are 
even crossbreeding pic bulls with 
these sensitive, imclligcnt 
wolves." 

“It was rcaliy in vogue IS years 
ago," Bill said. “We’re not seeing 
people getting as many licenses 
ns they used to. Maybe tltcy’rc 
finding-but-it’s an expensive 
hobby. They’re also learning 


the male-female rcIaiion.ships 
among wolves and have wit- 
nes.scd such devout love ihai they 
.still find it brcatlnnking. 

A male wolf will drape its paw 
over a female’s after being away 
from her for only a day. Bill 
Taylor said. And the female "will 
often leap and throw its legs 
around the male’s neck when I 
bring home one from the store. 


Nancy Taylor .said. “It’s a life com- • 
miimeni tliac keeps ^wing and 
getting stronger. 'Tliere's no back- _ 
ing off. Tliis is our family, our lifb.” 

So how-do the former owners 
of a successful Arizona insurance 
agency find themselves in 
Cucolalla, raising 10 wolves and 
trying lo teach the world every- 
thing they know alwut them? 

“Destiny, I guess,” she said. • 
“Sometimes good things come 
outoflos-s-” -1 

After the death of Uic beloved 
collie .she felt was irreplaceable, 
some friends encouraged Nancy 
to look into wolves. She has noi'~ 
only become a recognized autlior- 
ity but has found licrself on a 

•never-endingi'dam^o 

It'.s not all fund and games for 
(he Taylors- Raising wolves isn’t 


One of the wolves once 
became ollergic to thc-meai and 
developed a yeast infection and 
had to be fed lamb," said Maggie 
Miller, a longtime employee of 
die Taylors. 

But dial u only a tiny sliver of 
the problems the T.iylors have 
encountered with their wolves. If 
you lliink this is a joy ride, try' 
witnessing u complicated 
Caesarean birth of on arctic wolf 
that had to be given milk from a 
neigiibor’s Labrador retriever. 

Delausc (iicrc’s only a 6 per- 
cent difference between the pr» 
'tcin'Ievels of wolves and dogs,, 
the wolf pup received sufficient 
nourishment from die Lab's milk 
trls'(lic'eru^b'rec^in'g~uh<I*Uie 
general population's ignorance of 
wolves that infuriates the couple. 


they’re bu ying h ybrids wiien th ey Tliere’s ^ojnudijliey can teuch 

^hSI^iniK-y were-getung-B-pt i re "u s:^*-^ — ^ — = 

wolf." Taylor said wolves arc masters 

Because wolves are not a game *iii nonverbal communicadon, pos- 
animal, dierc arc no rules or leg- ’ seeing die ability to reason and 


ir^u times as 


pens - or even a mlc sdpuJadng 
that an owner must have one. 

- - Aliliough Idaho Fidi and Gome- 
Department conservadon officer 
Steve Agtc said he has never 
issued a flne in the region, he said 
that “when neighbors start com- 
plaining, tvcil step in ami take a 
look. S^etimes it’s not die fault 
of the animal. Most of the dmc it 
'has to do with die owner’s behav- 
ior and not the wolTs.” 

Perhaps it’s die wolfs behavior 
that mokes it so remarkable and 
fascinating. Protective, intelli- 
gent and extremely sensitive, 
wolves seem to have a second 
sense, die Taylors said. 

“It’s like th^ con almost look 

into your soul andltnow what 
you’re dunking*’ Miller soiff. 

The Taylors hpve long studied 


quickly as a dog. 

‘‘They’re so tuned to your emo- 
- dons, that it feels like they know 
what you arc'tliinking just by 
staring at you,” he said. “Once 
you’re with one, it bonds with you ' 
for life.” 

The Taylors believe there are • 
nhoui 50,000 tvolf owners in the 
nation, but less than ,10 percent 
are registe.red with tjiC U.S. 
Agriculture Department. 

They would like to sec more 
states work with wolf owners and 
attempt to regulate crossbreed- 
ing. But they know dial might not 
become reality. 

■"We’ll do everything we con to 
|ic lp pe ople raise these precious 
animals," Noncy Taylor said. , 
“After oil, we do ^are this Earth 
with them.” ' . 


-l-Gosts-0^^ 


Utah flooed-: 
-Stack up 


RIVERDALE, Utah (AP) - 
Officiiils are 'still working to '' 
as-sess die damage caii.sed by the ' 
Davis-Weber Canal break three ' 
wceksago. > 

■ Tlic canal burst suddenly July 11, 
sending 450,000 cubicynrds of mud 
“and 70,000 aae feerof water down — 
a hilLddc into a neighborhood. 

Floyd Bahom, general manager ’• 
for tlic Davis and Weber Coundes 
ICannl Co., said the company’s “ 
insurance provider has hired a 
gco-icclinical company to deter- 
'-miiTo-tlui exact caiisc of liie break^- ' - 
Geologists are studying the 
data taken by land surveyors and 
compare them wiili soil samples . 
to piece together the geological , 
-mystery. . 

In addition, preventative steps' ; 
are being taken lo prevent fur-,, , 
tiler erosion from spilling into diq 
already devastated ncigliborhood,V, 
Lt. Col. Bryan Odekirk of the- 
Utah National Guard said some. 

20 engineers arc ready to start a 
project that will help stabilize 
the hillside to prevent another 
“slide. . 

Odekirk said die team was sup- , , 
posed to start this week, but 
“delays In obtaiidiiglB'eanincefrom'^" 
Hill Air Force Base have pushed , 
the starting date until next.,, 
Monday. 

Tlie relief effort also continues. 
Even as late ns la.st weekend, htin- v 
dreds of volunteers continued to . 
help residents dig tliemsclvcs out 
and start repairs. 

“They’re still cleaning up, yards 
need landstmping and some have 
started slicei rocking," said Larry , 
Haasen, volunteer coordinator for . 
Riverdale City. 

Hansen said the outpouring of 
volunteer help has tapered off 
-buL local Mormon stakes' and 
emnlovces from local companies . 

id a hand, 
inucs to coor- 

*s. 


The American Red Cross hos 
finished its food service for slide, i 
victims but has now juucd n coll.' 
for ca,sli dondtidhsT. " - 

Tlic Red Cross lias already pf>' 
vided more than $100,000 in . , 
relief for Riverdale, which liasM 
depleted the local agency’s disas- ' 
ter funds, said Julia Groom- < 
Thompson of the Utah cliDpicr. 


THE LIGHT TOUCH I 


Town letsTthe Sr out of commercia l tub irig 


• — SPRINGDAXE; pt nirfAP)' - ■ 
' Springdale is curinilins inner- 

• tubing 'On Uie virgin Kivcr. 

••• The Planning and Zoning, - 
' Commission last week voted nor 
to i.uuc a conditional use permit 
for Scenic Cycles’ inner-tube 
rental business. 

The commission-alsITX^cid- 
ed to not issue permits after 
.Sept. 6 for river tubin^^ir 
other commercial activities 
the Virgin' River through: 

. Springdale, . - - 

The. action follows Zion 
National Park’s decision to 
ban. inner tube riding 
through the park effective 
next year. ' • 

-Dave Karaszew'ski, planning 
commission chairman, said, “It 


will be n'bcncfii to Spring- 
da le, residents and.peaplc»_ 
who come to'thc area, because 
--the river is going to be pre- 
served and - wildlife will 
return.” 

Karaszewski said he’s heard 
only positive comments. 

“I don't think it will slow- 
busincs.s down here one iota," 

' he said. "It’s our rcspon^ibili- 
>~«y to guide people in npprcct- 
. aiin'g' a n'uturnl: cnvico- 

-nmeni-.”— — — ; — : 

• Lorry-West, Scenic Cycles 
partner, called the commission’s 
decision “politics as usual in 
Springdale.” 

“Tubing is an attraction that 
people- enjoy. It’s nor jusr a 
money thing. There are going to 


be a lot of unhappy people, but 

_iiicy.doglt.coim't." said, 

West said there will be Icgol 

ac tion. 

"We’ll have to submit.thc 
planning and zoning’s action to 
the board of adjustments, and if 
dicy don’t reverse it. then U goes ' 
to 5th District Court," he said. 
“Wlint business is It of the plan- 
ning and zoning commission-to 
determine business activities on — 

■dicjlvcr ?" ■ •' 

Scenic Cycles can rent inner ~ 
tubes for five more wbeks. "It 
puts us iq a bind a little bit, . 
but wc started with a bike 
rental business," said Max 
Barker, Sceqic Cycles-owncr. - 
Barker said he anticipates bike 


reniols will take off once the 
— packls-^iow-trsncportatlon-sys— 
Icm is in place. 

_„ferkcr doesn’t Jjcllcve the 
commission’s decision w^l_ 
stop tube riding oltogcthcr, 
as people with their own 
tubes con float the river. Two 
other businesses in town sclT 
them. 

”I hate to see my neighbors 
gel ulcers overiots of tres-' 

Borkersoid. . 

“We'd been getting mail, 
visits ond phone calls ‘from 
property owners complaining 
about (he problems.” . . 

Kent Polro'er.-'dwner'orthc 
Desert Pearl Ltd in Springdolc, , 


which, bordcre the Virgin River, 
saidihner.tubing got completely- 
oui of control. 

-I’We’vd'Save os many as 150 
JO ZOO tubcr.<: an hour coming 
through,” Palmer said. 

West said it was impossible for 
there _to be that.many. riders. in 
an iiour. 


-Sewiie— V?- 
expents at 
Snake Riveras'? 
Class!" V 


You're an expert when no one 
else knoH’.s hoiv much you have 
to leartt. 

77ic averaxe person has five 
senses: sight, sound, touch, 
taste, and smell. Tlte successful 
'person has twojmre; 

'horse and common. 

Boy to friend on school bus: “/ 
ivofcc up thb niondng with 
chills, aJieadache, und a sore 
' throat — but.lt didn't work." 

Experience Is not what happetts 
. to you— It's what yo u do w ith 
. JV}p>tJi(}pp(tfsJb:yau.. ...' > 

If oit first yoiTdon’tiuMed — 

' so much for skydiving. 

We have our feet 
' on theground at..t 


. ReadJOie OPINION pages fqr.tbe latest comment and analysis 



aiTi: 



/ 


Sundaj'.Auciatl.lSdd; TkoApWwt. Tiiln FiB». MM 0-7 


IdahoA^^es'i- 


Drive-in-theaters become more-appealing to families 


GRANGEVILLE (APJ — Gone 
are jhe scratchy speakers fixed 
to a post. 

Gone are-thtrovenltigs spent 
viewing the latest release under 
the summer'stars. Left are'the 
■ineihories-of-teen*ago-yoar6 
spent at the drive-in. Or at least 
until Chris Wagner 
It’s nostalgia for one genera 
-tion and-a- first-rime experience 
for anothcr_tlmt WagnerJioiTcs 
wnrBffng peopIForall ages to 
the rejuvenated Grangevill 
Auto Vu. 

— ^Tho-drive-in- waa-built^on 
Mount Idaho Road by this dad, 
unde and grandfather in 195S. 
The towering movie screen 
showed movies to two decades of 
moviegoers before A1 Wagner Jr. 
dosed it down in 1986 to focus on 
GrangevUle’s conventional the 
•ateiTthc BlueFoxTAllVap 
biiUt that theater in 192S. 

**He just got tired of running 
ir.'**Chrl8 WaBner saldTsrthe 
Auto-Vii. 

The video Industry also cur 
into the big screen market. In 
1992, Chris moved back to 
Grangeville from Alaska. ' 

He had fond memories of the A 
drlvc-in from his childhood, 
^foespite his business venture 
H^tth his father at the Blue Fox, 
|wc kept eyeing the dilapidated 
#^ve-in on the east side of town.* 

■ “I dedded It would be kind of i 

■ fun to get it going.” 

I — The-reaHty-came-a-year-ago — 



Movlegoflrt cram Into the bock of a plckup.at tho Sunsol Auto Vu In Orsngevtlfs, ruesntly. while their dinner Is cooked on a nearby b 


when the father and son The dnve-m had on open house the ’60s ond 70s,’ when so mony 

Wagners opened the theater for and two free showings this movies were viewed frorn 

the-firsrshowing-in-12-ycars: month ro'let people gclVto$l^f~n>aund¥wmJs«i3 


“You play a good show and 

[>c op1l» wil l come.” 

In the short season last year 


and in the weeks the theater has ' 
_bccn open thj^s year. Wagner 
said a lot or parchis arc bringing 
the kids out tu sliow them what 
it was like when they were kids. 

I*arenitliko-to-t«U.kids of-ihe — 

dates they used to go on to the 
drive-in. .Many of the people 
show up in classic cars to 
authenticate the experience. 

More than anything. Wagner 

said; the' younger gcner.ilion is 
sinning to pick up on the drive- 
, mexprrience . Tecn scan bo swn 

— having lailgaic-partics-lH!f<ire-> 
the show; They play games and ' 
wail for the movie to start. 

Because of the wide age range 
of interest in the ihcaivr. 
IVagncr said he is trying to keep 
a family environment. 

He remembers as a child 
spending two hours after each ’ 
show just picking up the trash 
from the field. 

’i^eople-anrso environmental-"”” 

ly consdous now.” 

Rarely docs anyone leave a • 
mess behind when the movie is . ' 
over. The biggest change from 
those days of his childhood, 
though, is that the movie sound 
is no longer received in that sta- 
tic box. All the sound is trans- 
mitted on an FM radio station 
that can be picked up on a car 
radio. 

By next year, he’s hoping to 
offer AM stereo opiioiu too, for 

those classic cars that don’t hav e 

FM radio. 


I Sometimes, more ears make travel Controversial Kennewick bones 
smootheiv-fasterfresearehers say^^^^-^ ^ 

SAN FBANrrcrn _ i ^ ^ - . * , ^ 


SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - 
Conventional wisdom says the 
more cars that crowd onto a 
given piece of pavcmchi, the 
slower their journey and the 
more likely they’ll get to take 
part in on incrcasin^y common 
culmral event - the t^fic jamr — 
As usual, the conventional wis- 
dom is wrong at least under 
I certain circumstances. That's 
I researchers say 

their c'omputcr budccts of data 
I on how driver behavior affects 

__ti^fic. ^ • 

The report, published in 
Nature magazine, was written by 
Bernardo A. Huberman andDirk 
Helbing. ' 

Huberihan, who works . for 
Xerox in Palo Alto, says the basic 
premise can be stated in one sen- 
tence: At some point, the road 
becomes so crowded that easy 
' passing is impossible - and the 
cars all begin moving at a steady 
speed, in a solid block of traffic. 

The odds are they won’t 'be 
traveling at the speed limit - but 
they’ll be moving faster than if 
there wer^fewer cars and thus 
—fflbre-optionsto-pa~iss-and-inter— 
rupt the flow of the pack. • 

“It’s really interesting to see," 
he sold. “Leaking at simulations, 

increasing the number of cars on 
the road, you reach a special 
poinc-where the whole-mass of ~ 

traffiemovos as a solid block. 

“When the density goes past 
that point, you once again sec 
stop-ond-go traffic." ’ 

Another benefit, said 
Hubermai^ is a reduction in acci- 
dents. Traveling in such a block 
reduces changes in speed and 


passing opportunities, both of 
which contribute to highway car- 
nage. 


The California Deportment of*- 
Transportation, responsible for 
thousands of miles of overused 


Is there a way to reach this pavement, already has onramp 
asphmt nirvana? signals, but they aren’t very 

In Europe, said Huberman, the smart. However, CalTrans 

Dutch spokesman Jim Drag© soys 

its during rush hour, Reduced “This whole question runs into 
speeds also rcduco^c amount of ' a customer relations problem,” 

• space each car needs around it, he sold. “There you are, sitting at 
^o'ring more cars to occu-’ a light for a minute or two or 

And then there arc onramp by. How do you deal with those 


traffic lights. 

— “The data.soys it's po ssible t o 
hold traffic at onramps to sup- 


complaints?" 

-_Drago.said.that on average, a_ 
maximi^ of 2,000 cars per lane 


KENNEWICK, Wash. (AP) - It 
has been three years since the 
9.000-ycar-old bones known-as 
Kennewick Man were found in 
the Columbia River in eastern 
Washington. 

The discovery has sparked 
' debate over the ciu’ly peopling of 
Nordi America and litigation over 
.the way thc:fedeni] govenunent 
handles ordiacologicol finds. 

The Interior Department is 
prepanng to radiocarbon date the 
bones now qt the Burke 
Museum in Beattie to vr 
-confirm their-age-and- — 


totals 350 pieces, and is one of 
the oldest and most complete 
skeletons found in North" 
America. 

Early reports were that 
Kennewick Man lacked 
American Indian fcamr/»< — h<»’ 
was said to resemble actor 
Patrick Stewart, who starred as 
Capt. Jcan-Luc Picard in “Star 
Trek: The Next Generation.” 

Subscouent database se arches 

have found no matches for 


press. traffic jam formation and , pass a given spot every hour. Any 
in this way reduce average travel more, and things start to slow. 


vague and confusing that it’s no 
surpriscauthorities hav-c had dif- 
n^ty reconciling thc nccd for 
sdcntific study with respect for • 
the customs and traditions of 
Indian tribes. It’s time to make ' 


If Kennewick Man turns out to 
be about 9J000 years old, as early 
carbon-daxing suggested, .he 
.would-be. onc-skcleton-among — 
about dozen of that age found in 
the United States. 

^ “Not unique, but rcla- 

> lively- — rare,-;’’ — 


time,” Helbing said in a tele- 
phone interview from the 
University of Stuttgart in 
Germany, where he works. 


But he’s not ready to reject the 
smon L'ght idea out of hand. 

“Docs that have an applica- 
tion? Sure. But it would require a 


woSb“ctSificd'’S date tlu^ bom no^anh Burk ^ 

^encan Indian under Museum hi Scattk to Confimithara^atui learned about the peo- 


Helbing said Germany Is real education program'’to con- 
experimenting with using indue- vlncc people that sitting nt thoK 


tion coils bcncatli tlic freeway to 
create a “smart” control of 
onramp traffic ligliis. 

In die United States, those sig- 


onramp lights is good for them. 

California took the concept 
one step beyond about two years 
ago, when it hosted the nation’s 


nals are on a- regular timing first test of on automated hi^- 
schcdulc which doesn’t respond way. 

to ever^chnnging traffic pauems. . Tiny magnets embedded in the 

-But-che-German-system-,’using~~a5ptralrgH~cUher side of traffic" 
information on the speed of iraA lanes at four-foot intervals 
fic and the number of cars on die enabled cars with corresponding 
r Md,^ho^i^^ Iw^.traffic for a^ ari- magnets to constantly orient 

..as possible to creating that ideal first working section of highway 
block of traffic. is expected to be open by 

— “The delay at-the onramp is -September 2002; — location" 
-only--a matter of minutes," unknown. 

Helbing said. Cost of the technology? 

“While a traffic jam can easily Less than $10,000 for a mile of 
double travel times, with that sys- freeway, compared to $1 million 
tern, taking into account the time to $100 million for one mile of 

you’re waiting to merge, you're new highway, sold Dick Bishop, 

still. better off by obout 20 per- spokesman for the U.S. 

cent or so.” Dcnartment of Tran.spoft .-trian. 


would be classified as 
American Indian uri'dcr M 

federal law. , 

A decision is expected 
by the end of September 

or coriy Oaober, Frands 

Md^onamon, the depart-, 
ment’s chief consulting ordiaeol- 
ogist, said. Bones over 500 years 
old typically arc' considered 
Native American under federal 
law. 

Then the next step would be to 
determine whether they can be 
Jihked'Witiicanyrmodernrday: 
tribes. 


study of orchaeology, history, 

lake sonic time, McManamon 
said. “I think we can expect the 
..remains-will be at.thc-Burko- 
Muscum .a while longer," 
McManamon told the Pasco- 
Kennewick Rotary Club. 

Kennewick Man’s skull was dis- 
covered at Colombia Pork by two 
coDegc students during the annu- 
al hydroplane races there in 


determine fishethert/tef zeouId-ifeeJasafiedas 
American Indian tinderfederal laze. 


-KenncWick Man's skull measure- 
ments among modern-day peo- 
ple. 

So when the U.S. Anny Corps 
of Engineers, which hdd custody 
of the bones, made plans to 
return the skeleton to Northwest 

z=;Ccibes nnd gr — rh r — Narive- 

Amcrican Craves Repatriation 
ond Protection Act,-cight promi- 
nent sdemists sued for the right 
— mstudv-thc bones. . • , 

Tlie lawsuit is on hold in U.S. 
District Court in Portland pend- 
~ing the-rasults of-the-lnterior — 
Depanment tests. 

Rep. Doc Hastings, R-Wash., 
chose the Uircc-year aimivcrsary 
of Kennewick Man’s discovery to 
rc-introducc legislation to clarify 
federal law govcming.thc treat- . . 
mcm of historic human rcmain.s. 


-1996. Th e colle ction of bones now. Hc _cal lcd c xisting_law “so. -'arrived," McManamon said. 


'and learned about tho pco- 

r-Vx,/. pling of North America • 

taas from bones, 

n although some of the 

II interest in Kennewick 

Man may have been 
based on mirinformaiion - 
reports that suggested the skull 
may have been that of a white 
man, he said. 

The earliest migration to North 
America may have occurred 
20,000 years ago, long before . 

region, and the likely source of 
North American coloniation was- 
Northcast Asia, he said. 

— There arcTBany'imaiKvvcrcd”’'' 

qucstions.abqut how the nngra- 
tion occurred -in waves of people ■ 
ora trickle? And wdiy?'Were peo- " 
pic moving east from Siberia into 
an area that was newly exposed 
due to glaciation? 

“Kennewick Man may provide ■ 
a link between early migration 
and. the people we.know.werc ... 
here when .the Europeans. 


California governor drops defense of immigration law 


SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) - Gov. 

Gray Dnt>t< fh* '« hM tn pre-_ 

srirVe Propoddon 187, saying much of the . 
voterepproved ban on welfare and other 
public benefits for illegol immigrants is 
already enshrined in federal law. 
l-’An’-a^Mment announced 'I'tiursday 
between Davis and other poises involved 
in a legal ' dispute stemming from 
. Piopositionl87I^oareprThdsionsofihc 
•^'=1994-Tneasute,'indudingi t5 bail on pu blic^ 
education for illegal Immigrant children. 

— Nonethelessj-Mvis said the-agreement -- 
“essentially embraces the ^lirit of 187.” 

' “We have resolved a divisive wedge’ 

' issue in a way that is fiilr to the voters, me 
constltiitlon'and the~law,”'Davis, a 
Democrat who opposed Proposition 187, 
said at a Angeles news ct^crcnce. 

- Under the agreement, the.partin in 
secret mediation, who included several - - 
Proportion 187 opponent^ asked a feder- - 


alcountc^p ^e state's app^ ' Income, and Temporary Assistance for PcteWilson. impleinmimjvirifinsofProoositionlS7 

^ Nec^ Families, commonly known as wel- A fedcral judge ruled mwt of the bailor All state^wcies ar^^'ulred^to "' 

. nieasure unconstitutional last year, and enforce a law unless an apSalscoui? 

vowrs approved the measure. The partes also Weed that a 1982 U5. Wilson appealed. Rather than deciding rindsituncwsfitutionaLBrownesaidlTbe 

Supreme &urt ruling requiring T<^ whether to drop or pursue the appeal, agrwauml does not teprrsent such a find- 

frtrt public.^ools and from ed uca te iJleBol immi grnnis prohibited D avis sent t|ip mnT\«»r to frwtiv ml mr-rfin . ■«ai i ,h« fo, 

other services including non-emer — ^poatlon isrs effort to keep such stU: tion. — PropoSrioni87 were 

gemey hcitiih caro, and r^uired smte and devout of put^csdunls. Wilson said the mediation process was die’ litigation," Ms. Browne said, 

local officials and service providers to Thcynoiedthatalowcrcounfoundihe “hkenegotiotingwithyoursd/" Ron Prince, a OMiulhor of the measure. ' 

report suspected illegal immigrants to provision requinng a range of officials to "I don’t jhink it’s fain 1 don’t think it’s said he olJ^ m fit,- n mnrint, 

c?JT T" r reportriUegaflininlgrannrto-ouUroritits "ngntButlllilnktliatby vinveorthefaa toUwsctUmait. 

Some jaws that mitror its provisions unronstitudonaL ^ (Uic nppelJotc court) has eoncuned in this Lt. Gov. Cruz Bustamante, a vocnl aide 


borne laws tnat mitror its provisions unoonsdtutlonaL (Uic oppcllotc court) has concurred in this 

w^ on me books long before the diviave - The only part of Fropositloh 187 left abuse of Judicial discretion that it has not 

ballot measure, and omen wen* insnin«H inrnrr i« n nmvto'nn Imnnvln., ieit. , 


Lt. C^. Cruz Btutamant^ a .irocal critic. 

^o( meaSurS. and odiers were inspired intact Isli proidsion hn^ng tougher Teft (inJtiativr^^rtOT; i^di tirpt?:, th'e^d^ 

— 1 z selLar-usc- f aIs c sue." Wilson said in today’s-tbs Angeles histoiy of California politics bSwiiie to 

. J^osoin mediati^^^^ idpnUflcatlon documeins to hide their Times. ' , a^" saU BSmlS.VDSoSS!^ 

landmark 199e.fedcral welfare law oit true atizcnshlp. Sharon Browne, a lawyer for the ' ’The debate over fto^rion 187 has 

illegal immigrant^ff from many of the U.S. District Judge Manana Pfoclzer drafters of Proposition IBZ.rondemned always been about how^^omlans ‘ 

^ ^ toepprovpor-reject Uit- — ihrricalrShir^d heiTJTOprTlnrPatffl relateno one another himiaf. 

»««ancnL • Legal Foundation, wasdudySg the agree- and about not scapegoat 

wJot federal programs such os Medlcttid, Act^pts to save Proposition 187 began mcm and considering , future litigation, young, the sick or precnant women." be 

food scamps, Supplemental Security with Oavtf predecessor, Republican Gov. including suing state agendcs that do not said in a written statsnenL 


wJot fcdciul programs such os Mb^coi^ Act^pts to save Proposition 187 began mcm and considering .future litigation, 
food scamps,. supplemental Security with Davis’ predecessor, Republican Gov. including suing state agencies that do not 


Homes For Sale 
On The Internet 



http://www.magicvalley.com and 
-^lick on “HOMESELLER’Vl ~ 


FREE ZQ ALL INTER^^^ USERS! 


• Windermere Realty • Mountain West Realty • Sabala Ret 
Uz QiJlch Rea) Estate • Remax Keystone Realty (Buitey) • Canyons 


/•SiverSage'Reaity 
le Realty • Cornerstone Reedy 



^ MUCSo 

Buhl 

To view more properties at our home page, go to www.cnnvonsitlermitv.rni 
— emails c8t@canvort8iderealtvxom —T-800.27K-o:tft«; 

Bcyidenliai : 

• >EAT HOME on Ir comer lot, W'aich (lie horse wees from \-our fnini >-ard! Incl fmii irees. dog 

• NEW CONjfmucnON! Hme lo pick your colors. ^ l)dmi 1 iulJi in nice ii’eiRlil)orli(H)d. To l)e 

. built w/ (lualiiy construction & manv cxipas. Just $85,000. Jerome. S.ANDRA fAPP.S 32 i-8752 
OR 324-335i. «99-00530 

• WOW come look at this 3 bdrm home! ,\e\ver arpel, hew roof. Ialid.scapi-d \ard & fenced Would 
([ualify for O down finance w/ price at $65,000. Seller will pav<!15()0 closine costs, Jerome. • 
R\RRY BR.^CKE1T 536-6764 OR 324-3354. «98-03l.«> ' 


Jeroose - \£JkV QE.OL3 bdrm. 1 .5 bath home w/ • 

• >»J & of Cline sftacc. Reads to mose into’ 
i‘^.^00. GEM OK SK\RP 733-5559 OR ‘ 
T35-0590. 


*37.5 ACRES «/ full water sltares. Gix-at acreage for small fanii or great lildg site. Has Valliv Mini pisot 
Located betwaTi'n''&jenime. $125,000. DAN SUHR 324-2019 OR 5.39-2019. 


• • PRICB-REDl'CnOM 3 bdmi 2 bath ranch style home on-1 .5 acres: Sti|x.Tlofaiionw/ commercial 

I pj\sibililies. $85,000. Jerome. BJ. R0.SS 324-4249. #98-(KH)2 i 

I • GREAT VAUiTI H bdrm 2 batli liome w/ lots of oak. jacuzzi tub in main Iralli, Home on 5.9 acifs Ls 
one (If die best laliics on the market. Great set-up for’horses w/ room for an amia, $165,000. 
JiTome. KEmi UER41AN 324-1206 OR 324-3354. ttOO-OITO*! 

• WELL KEPT 3 bdrpi 2 bath home all on one level. Close to town w/ shop, tick nil. utilitv hidg. Iiav 
.storage & dog kennel. CJiain link fencing w/ approx. 3 acres. $139,500. Jerome. BJ. R0.SS 324- 

• i2a 9. «‘W-OOf:«l 


TWin Falls - GREAT FAMIU' II0.ME dose to uratt. 4 fadm 2 
bath, possible 5th bdrm upstairs, lots of sq b, tder open floor 
plan.ThishomcshmlotsofTlC. $130,000.-ULaAKnM: 
733-9642 OR 735-0590. #99W99O0802 . 


jenate - CZDAK SIDED 3 bdrm home w/ garage on 
Cumer loc i dose to sdtooL $69,900. D.A.N StTlR 
52+-2I09 08 539-2019. ,*‘XS-0(r()‘J 



Jenw - SMCIOtS FIOOK PIA.V loich 4 bdrm 2 
baib Irttng na ptos fnmlr nn. .Never wood fence & 

«frp< i ggae a yeg q n l Ooiy $54>900. 


• BEAirriFlJL VIEW' from your 5.61 aca* lot Power it plione already on die propi rtv. $12,500. 
Jerome. KTHY SPENCER 324-3032 OR 539-0501. #99-OO350’ 

• BEAITIFLI BLDG .LOT for die discriminadng liuyvr ordy1 Incnxlilile view of .SliosJionc Falk, indudes • 

_ gtil f wursemi-m benthip. $56.900. l erome . B.!. Rass 324-42 4«>. »<) 8.t)>9->7 • . 

• o liiii .sun availabUTlor stIcE buiirfiomcs in new easiddc subdbfsion. Jerome. SANDRA CAPPS 324- 
8752 OR 324-3354. fl<)7.02923A)2929 . 

• BEST BUY residential lot Ca.sli or terms. Great central location & several ai-ail. $10,000. Burlev' 

JOHN ODLAGA 324-3006 OR 324-3354, #9fW3.36i-03.368 

-• ROO.MY 2 bdnn home otrlu-st nntler 3 acres on ouKklrk oriown.TresIi parrii:nwer onkl &’wtkKj ' 
stme. Ig.shopli ootbldgs. $107,900, Eden. SANDRA CAPPS 324-8752 OR 324-3354. «99a)l 131 

• AWESO.ME CUSTOM BUIU home on 5+A acres. Over 4900 sq ft w/ 5 bdrms 3 baths. Daylight walk- ' 
- out bsmf. ig rooms w/a countn-. tiled kitchen w/biillMn died table. $315.000:nkT. GENT OR 

ELUE SHARP 73^5559 OR 735-0590. «994)2270 * . : 



Hagcrmaa- EASY CARE 3 bdrm 2 baib booev/oicr 
2000 sq ft & 2 car garage. Nice garden area, fruit trees. 





• PRICE REDUCED! Vety nia 3 bdnn 2 3/4 hallitrl-lcv'd home tt/ 2800 -ii ft on 2,28 acres Great 

location & lots of aims! $195,000, Magcrmah. KEim UERMAN 324-4206 OR 324-3354, #98- 
02 523 

I ■ PRLMEACREAGE.subdivision North of.Shoshonc. 4.63 acres, '3.66waiersliares. Most choicclod 

$1,000 less than others. Mlg home okav w/some restrictions. $24,500. CAF-A (Gaya) LETTE 886- 
. .2186.999-01956 . . . 

Income Property: — 

• .MAINTENANCE SIDING, newer roof. Duplex & detached single family liome. $79^900. Jerome. BJ, 

ROSS 324-4249., #9W)2303 / ^. ..1. . 


Bliss - ROOM FOR A HOR^ 3 bdrm 2 nywm 
built home on almost an acre. Anderson wood wiodoRs. 


24' X 30* metal shop & lots more. $^.900. MASV 
BROWN 536-6643 OR.934-4334. #99:02293 


J ut • ?ZED STORAGE EOK TOIV RV? J bdrm 1.75 
boifr d brxk boBKi FnilMm «/ &I. attached 2 car ctrase 


• GREAT RETAIL in downtown location. 1400-*- sqflon main floor &lisml for storage. A must see! 
$45,000, Jerome: SANDRA CAPPS OR BJ. ROSS 324-3354. #98-02676 

, , • HEAVY INDUSTRIAL, bareground. 9.87 acres w/ easy uj 14J.4. $165,000. Icronte. LINDA — 

-_MIU£R324-86840R 324-3354.#9&01099-=;: — 

• 962 ACRES w/ waiet Commercial site w/ many uses. Eaw access to I-8-4, $165,000. Jaoibe.JJNDA 
, MniER 324-8684 OR 324-^354. #984)1097 


PRLME MAIN SIREFT CORNER. Sharpest commerdal bldg In town w/ plentiful parking. Currently 
housing 2 businesses w/ separate entrances. $249,000, Hagcrman. JAMIE MARTIN 837-6022 OR 
420-1420. #99411189 . ' 



P(X)R^J 


































Your #1 Realty Estate Firm ^Serving 
The Magic Vaiiey Since 1958! 




TWIN FALLS 734-0400 
JEROME 324-8652 



W5.000 Fully rareapprte^iPpprt ■ S39.700 Ci«an and shajp lown- 


Sweouj, vety «n lew nitfl. home. I W«H 


stove, fetnperalof. snulJ ItnctO 
Mck yard, storage Common atu 
wamtained py association. Pnctd to 
seD. CUl TOM LLOYD 737-3924. 



OtANA WHITNEY 
Sales Associate 
-734-2108 • 


$49,900. PRICE REDUCED] Great 
-to c jlioo-» ^ tot« to to wft -ln-Kimtxrly; 
Large comer let. 3 btdmm. t turn. 
.s.7[;«tjnDiivate(]i.CALL. Carolyn 
CUTLER 737-3913 OR STACY 
STEPHENS 737-3909. e9902tSfi 





S59.900. Eicelleitt buy on tfus spa- S55.900. Pul this great home on $66,500 3 bedrooms 1 bath 964 

ttous.wntage. 2 bdim home. 1300 | your ovm larw! lovely, targe mfg - — - 

sq.. It. on nuin.fioof. Mamlerunee ■ no„e emit appro. 2050 so It 4 
free vinyl seJmg, Basement tor extra I .. y “ * 

storage. ^ngle_car I « f/2 baths, island gas heat, convenient to CSI. 

■oaraoe~Pii«'inclod« all me I Mefw" $ moref PnceO w/movltig 

kitchen appliances. CAU RALPH I cost in mind, CALL JOANN 737- FORBES 737- 

Ofl DOROTH Y TO Sg. .9901663 ■ 39*1. #4901136 39T90R 734-457Z./99Qt144 i 




3919 OR 734-457Z. #9901144 


.. -.L—Jj 


$69,900. Super home with 2 bed 
rooms. 'nursery area & largo roor 
Idr extra bedroom or tamlly roorr 
Large rooms, 2 baths w/ona handl 
cap. Hardwood 'llaors. 'spiinVlei's 
very nice! CALL PEGGY 737-3975 
#9902319 



STACY STEPHENS 
Sales Assoclaio 
. _737-3909, ... 


iraht,. .W-! 



$82,500 Great horse property! Nice 
3 bedroom, i tuth home on t acre 
Has horse corral and lots ol room 
lor more. Outbuildings, cold stor- 
age. Close to town. To see. CALL 
JOANN 9BS-2994. PRICED TO 
SEUI 













I NU?llJ-11'NI'N-mN»#?gN'l.9il;N 






$159,600. wautihil tamly nomt.teaiures 5 
tediooms. 3 bams, never oak bKhin win 
an ^ geodes' Main floor larml/ room off 
plus lamiV/iec room in basemem. 
Y2K storage room, 2 gas fireplace litsens,. 
hirgt Cetk «/hct tub.'targe yM v/garden 
and Iruit trees. Storage shed, dbl parage 
sptrUer system. CAU ITNH flA$ini$SEN 
7T7-3mOR«a-2»7. «9%2:!S 






LEXICLAAR 

Sale 2 .Assoclaie 

734-8753 



































Family Home 

OwMfC«iiy!flrirtr«rsir\'3hc(trooffl-»V 
hi'h eoniemjiiira^ in nice area n^rCsT^ 
l>"°t»)- pine t ecentt. Featutea Mreptare. leceue.l lielniniL ccniral air 

i«tJi 'e'l'nrse t -ranfry*: laumlrj'chuw. pJtTa iTenioI'- 

u:ihwaiiier. haekyinUi carport. N'oiv backvini. Utne itorale ilinl A 2 ear tfarast 
onlyJTJJOO. »9W)lS2fl Built m lililS. ITatitain priceiiatnnlvSmVlW 

Cal]SlercKahmapp,CRB,CKS734-IM|, »9t)017M 


backvifd. Ui«e itorafe ilinl * 2 ear tfarase. ^ 

Call Artjanea <23.5411. Call DavM Waiaon S43.*14S. • 


Call Oavid Waiaon S43-A34S. 


lanrelv 2 tvJiiMin. 1 lutb K<n ;1 Catilrn Ciinilo. 
iValuirt N2.<v| fl.oflivin^ipwcttilh 

a rartn iftrmti!li<iiii. n(rptiic.iauia« IH. S 

-111 xixafe in the 2-wi yaiaKe SprcM^iilar 
vieu! Ujicd oiinmuiiilv uilh 2 niileaiif 
ualling ivilll. Re.liKtJ hi’SnO.nftl aiitl iNiCi;? 
‘ Call Tonya tSaekua 734-3138. 


No Delay 

MoFC.RijlhLln! 

Thi« lieu- loniliucikm i« |>crffcl Im i)ic ni«l 
’ Ifil’Wllli.J iutii..mr 
llTOwi ri iifmin^ijurr, lauilciiieilinc* 

teiilrji ai( Ai 2 lar Carajir. IjKJlril m 

.clfietrijiini rciiJemiai area. I’ritnl jumi. 


1286 Addison Avenue East 
fe=l Twin Falls • 208-734-1991 


^ magic valley realty 


Call N'eil ilaiptier 734.1338, 


Reduced ! 
— 'TIiAusandnl! 


Call Davlil Walton S43-834S, 



FM "aCebY OWNenToK wlih 4 bod. ^fWH falls acreage TWilfFAi 

Cj>u>>i 9 eiiiTtr - - CARtYNNAoicic-- o,a»tic» 


zh6T t^lnrienamr — «qo^FS7?rww - - 

HAQEflMAN • 

j’jflf* eellino, (9. Witry On« ot • KINO) 4 Bed* 
w OBI. Oft., lots Of Win* room. 4 both homo with 


W/OBI. Oft., lots of win* 
dows w/ covofince. ig. 
kllehen w/ brookfost bar. 


CongonlolSbdmBoouty. 29S2 sq. tt. 4 bdrm. 2 
Finished Bosomeni. ofllco. formal din 


room. 4 both homo wiih Suoof shoip. Immoeulato. O0tosswlndo«*t.2eoroo* wiriT 
Snako Rlvor froniogo In* I ni— h* • I r««« h.«i« f»»n„ ....S- I 


rCiastio-oidorhema' MOW — 
lovingly I'oatorod and Iwwn 
uogrodod. 3 bdrms. 2 Nowot eounity homo 0i 


opstooog. 9 Odfms. 2 —"V' v«w..uy npmo on 1 

2<^on. moOorn kitchen “f- Ooaign, very 


onk cownols. range. OW. ing foom. 2 kllchoni. 2 
disposal, soparoto dining car gorago. and boat dock 


aroa, walk*ln doaota. eov* 
orod polio, hot tub roody. 
3-car garage <convtrtod 
Into extra rm.. can bo 
changed back), profos* 
alonally landscaped, un- 
derground sprlnklarsV 
-foncodpBSTuro.'how 
hexagon groonhouso & 


Koni & Ondy CoiUns 
208*734-dl04 

Prudential 


rage, hogo family room. -.ki-TJ... “ 

Shop, ir^olod wsidro. f^an'^A’ ac 
bOaullM dock, this homo L^nJo AaEa. 1 nnS 
hosovwytWno.si49.900 ® 

:nn riuiimn x%..c. ija^. ®’ ““''’O space o>us 


-rn~ » Prwrtla. 

GaryofShiiloyrof oppt. 733.0330 

NEI^SON 

CL£^ 2 bodtoom yrtth 

734*3930 ' siding, now roof In 


Can Cartynn & Oldi Noh ai 
200*055*4200 or Irwin 
Roatty 200-734-6500. 


sq.ft, of living space o>us 
Dsm'l polonliol. »99 02»29 

. WINDERMERE 

Rooi Esiolo 


vauitod coiiings, boauului 
oak sioiicaso. 4 bdims. 3 
boihs, with room lor more 
^ In bosomoni. Now dock, 3 
car garago. Ouiot rood oil 
Orchard, S300.000 00. i 
Coll Corlynn & Dick Noh ol I 
2D0.655-426B or Irwin 
Roolty 208-734.C500. 


omall; fnvremaglcvalleyraalty.com 
wobilta: www.maglcvalleyreolly.com . 


View mv listings 
Times-News 
online 
at 

www.maglcvalley.com 


norti&^lirer 

..--Click here.. , . 


Nathan Lyda 
. Wills Realty 
' 420-0989 


r- .on largo loti <«,«» *Wl 

w. fruit trws, putbldg, wr payments on now homos. TWIN FALLS • Newly nst. S53, 
UmHodoftor-iilllmo od 2 bedroom homo with hoi 

««n. A fiomoownor program. nowoak cupgoards.now* .On 

Lowest Inlofosi rales or roof and eorpot on fully - »«* 

ip";i,’Si3?,?iS'5 ,K: ,akwSSS"h'omes RO 

■S=°;^ioT.,UT5 - NELSON 

*»vrw>)- . r opENHousEf— • . ~ - REALTY - 


CLE^ 2 bodtoom_wtth Very doan 2 bdrm. 2 baih TWIN FALLS - Swimminn TWIN FALLS Charming. ' 

vln^ siding, now roof In hwo on Hanison. moloi pool 3 Mtm 2 'A bn1h° oldor 2 story homo. 3 twin rai i « 

98 . dock, and 2 shods »lc^. cornor lot. NOW 3“'?' bdrm.. 2 bolh. toncod run^k^ 

on largo lot. SdftOOC, JUSTtea.BOOf ynrd.-iovoiyshododsfrobt,' 


Looking lor on Inoxpon 
stvo acroogo? Closo lo 
tho frooway In Bliss, 
this 2 story homo hos| 
a lot of sq.ft, with 4 
bdrmi, 2 baths. Ig ro* 
modolod Michon. Sur*l 


■S=°;^ioT.,UT5 - NELSON 

opENHousEf— - - REALTY - 

_ , — Sol, 4 Sun,. July 31 thru 7*iA.*)a*sn 

JEROME. Excopllonol Auo. t. Join Wnniwlnn 734*3930 

homo. NW of Jofomo Homos for froo hoi dogs, ^in faiIls tan non 
Country Club sliuoiod on ico croom & oodol 2 'a price drop**i®A ?«2 
2.5 oc. BooutJfol S bdrm. mis. pasi hosplinl on Hwv "”^‘*i * i®* 

4 both, prlvoto rnoaior . 30 ocroaa from radio . fTn c o oTc rVi* A? - 

nowoak kitchon.nowcof* . 

pal & hardwood floors RUPERT - 3 bdrm. l bnih. CallVorn 

Ihfotmhoul. 3 cor garogo Foncod. near schoola. By '>»4''owj 


.uroai aiartor home or TWIN FALLS - BUY ON 
CONTRACT- Homo on 3 
ROBERT JONES ocros, bom, foncod. dock. 
BCAITV ' saiollllo, S050/mo. OAC. 
nCMLIY Coll 733-7755 

— 7a;^^fv^ — 


cui*do*sac. spofkiino, 4 cabki, 3 bdrm, basomom. 
-odrm.. 2 oaih. 3-coc go- loncad yard, homo of* 
*i7^*5«». fleo7*. siorago, oxtras. 
10e2Bkh oin 0.730-9333 St39.^. 733-7O70_ _ 


the 


TWIN FALLS ~ N»''i“' and make most of 

See' It To Appreciate Itl payment. Main 

$35,000 housols1.S8lory,2bdrm, 

PIOBSom 3 bdrm. iWboth * >S bath. Has loadod 

two sioryjownhome with O'®** ®®'' woodwork^ 

-foncod yatd..a99*0l574 MUNROE^ROGIRTS- 

Koni 4 Cindy Collins REAL ESTATE- 

206-^-6104 • 543-8806/543-6339 

Prudontlal 543-4361 

1-800.241-3028 

1*800-734*4536 


PmCEOFONEIS96.600. near TF. Pollol siovo, 
LIvo In the main homo saiollllo syslom. covorod 
and use tho second for-o' dock, gorogo/shop 4 
romal and make most of shads. Boauilfully land* 


your paymani. Main scoped w/ptivat» drive, 
house Is 1.5 siory, 2 bdrm, Walor. shores. St 88,500. 

1 .5 bath. Has loadoo Coll David Woison S43* 
glass and oak woodwork. 8345. *99-02297 

WUNROE--ROBIRTS- rnaWlii waUBf*- 

REAL ESTATE magic valley 

543-8806/543-6339 FPRltV 

543-4361 icaiiy 

1-800*241-3028 734-1991 


4 Indoor hoaiod pool 4 owner. Call 436*5812. 1 
spa. Almost oil now'con* **«« _ 

BUuetlon. too much to list. ^£2,^/ "''"® 


rnodolcKl Wichon.'"Sur*| I stnjctlon. loo much to list. 

fOunded-by-lg-ehado|-l— Ooflnlioly-a-must-aooi- — P^ ^l Fnrac i n iJttwantoty- 
;r 008 . has o mllklno On1vS249.950. ^ctksn.solo Inprogross. 


troos. has 0 milking OnlyS249.9SO. 
born 4 shop on tho CallPator Jotiy 

— prppofty.a s wkascQr^ . _SNAKE.BiyEkjtEALXY- 
fffls foranlmois. Situ* 734-9400 or 731-7897 

olod on 3.87 acres all 

foncod for pasture. JEROME. Our loss, your 


Priced 01 only $93,500. 
_CJoaojaJ5Bgatman 
Ashing. 4 booling. Call 



^ly^ ort iMs 2 ^ sq, fL 4 

East Ave. A For datoiled 
-flyar or 609*63a*a085.« 


rooucuon sole In progross. 
Our loss Is your golnl Any 
heme w/ a rod ino mus t 
“Eo’soTH'quTcTdy. Coll 
Wostwind Homos lor do* 
tails. 732-5710. 


DOSHIER 
—REALTY — 

734-2922 

both. dbl. gnrogo. etilo 
sprinklors. skylight, cov- 
ered polio, eouriyord w/ 
fvind snn <uvi avi 



WB^WANrmHB.rr 0 U'i 735 - 0596 r'^^ 



WESTERN REALTY 
733-2368 

E»eftOnCTI»li yp«n ewiSy 


KlMBERLV. 806 Cenlor View TTIV U^finorc 
SI. E., 3 41. clean. $62.. 

600. 423*6369 eves. Stan liro6S-NCWS 

. iiLUjiLERi*YvAttrttci[yo.3. Online 

TsHm Lg. bock yd. Larvl- sjiiiinc 

scoping. Must sell sooni nf 

MargarotorRon423-S51S 

I ' ' ■ -1 www.maglcvaUcy.com 

Please chock your ocNor 
corroctnosa on iho flrsi 
day that It runs, os Tho 
TImas*NowB Is not ro* 
sponsible for errors al- 
ter Ihst'llme. 




594,000 3 Uoih brick homo. 

Foncod yard roody lor ^ family rooms, 2 gas firo* 
family or pots. Great places, Jacuzzi, covorod 
lllo-stylo in this cul-de-sac P®"® ^ dock, boouillui 
homo. Space for fenced bock yard, slorano 
expansion. 3 bdrm, 2 car garogo 4 BV 

— 2-tjatnsrFuirbn5omonriS“ “PO'kinor4i64;900rGoH — 
panlally flnishod with °®'''P Watson 543-8345. 
most ot tho 3rd bath *99-01662 


0 Konl 4 Cirtdy Collins IMagiU VailCy 

208734-6104 rpflltv 

Prudential rCdliy 

- 734-1991 

1-6Q0-734-5536 ' ■ 

Tuiiu 18. • . - „ — = TWIN FALLS. Groat family 

TWIN FALLS. By owner homo with 5 bdrnis, 2 
homoonSae.AsloIl baihs on acrd'lol wim dll 
^fss.Dorn/iock.foom. tho bonoflts of country 


“It 4 *Uvom Jvda sold a horns on..- A^o.- I rrigoiod postur®; ImV yw dos^o » tl)wnl 


lomesenen 


Connio Horborl I 
Sllvor Sago 


Syslo-m, 72840 oq.fi'; formal living 4 
S159K, Coll lor appoint* dining, gas hoot, AC. dbl 
mom at 208*736-1583.a car gorago 4 a davKoht 
•tw.M CAt ■ e Coll Sue Loosll 

TWIN FALLS: Classic 2 ©733-5336 or 735-2440 

Bloty rocently romodolod. PmrtAntini 


MILLION DOEtSRViEW 
OF THE CITY OF ROCKS 

3 bedroom, I bath home in Almo on 2.3! 
acres, low mninMnce exteriors with newer 
mc(al.roor..CaU John or Dorothy Cox at 

JmKK 


I Custom Home Building 


COFFIN 

BAV<GOFFIN*CONSniacnON INC. 

Detailed finish'carpentry 
• Custom mouldings- 1 ._ 

ALL BUILT TO YOUR SPECIFICATIONS 
1 5 years experience In the Magic Valley. 

734-6849 • 731-0408 


|0NLINE HOMESELLER 

I "/ ilccideri to give lhe-Tii/icS‘News 9 

Online Honteseller a trji to see 
If It would work — and it did.' WaihauvS^^ 

, . - 

/ am very happy with the rcstdtsl" . 

REALTORS GET RESULTS 

with your listings on 

The Times-Xews Internet 

call TN Online Sale.t Representive 733*0931 ext.212 
or ema il; slcbylfmaglcvalley.coin 


near TF. $175,000. Coll TWIN FALLS. Grool homo 
Lorry Smith 734-2028 or at a groat boy. This wall- 

539-2O20.-S99-O212O ! -kept 4 bdrfflrrTORTiom^ 

maril*^ s/oIIak IsonalglolwlihgroQtNE 

magic Vaiiey location. This homo is 

MMmltir equipped with solar pon- 

- I t rcl l ty -al s plu s wood-burning — 

70/1 4nn*4 siovo. Must seo to oppco* 

*0^“iyyi cioto. Coll Suo Loosll 

©733*5336 or 735-2440. 

TWIN FALLS: Coiiogo Prudential 

resldeneos. Front of 733-5336 

Iwso has 1 bdrm, 1 bath. 1-B00-734-.5536 


TWIN FALLS: Coiiogo Prudential 

resldeneos. Front ol 733-5336 

fmso has 1 bdrm, 1 bath. 1-800*734-5536 

IMng room, kitchen. Sock ~ 

FALLS: 2 bdrm cot* 
bdrms iggo zoned R*4. prolos- 

rtAnri* K sionol overlay. Lgparking 

t4B n*nn“5.’‘ -area w/oHoy occoas'; 

Bn?kn°«°T*P. Graotlocnilon for in-homo 

business. .Now $68,000. 
Coll ShorrI Pullln 730* 
3988. *99 01357 



magic valley magic valley 
realty realty 

734-1991 734-1991 




( JNEXPiNSiVE HOUSING CLOSE TO WORK IN JEROME. 
1976 Ousrdon Van Oyka medal fiome. 24x56 on wsll kspi 
space In convonleni Jsroms PirICLdt refll HSISZOO [ergs 
bath oft maitsr bedroom, new lollsts,' tub. sinks snd waiar 
T0D« AT 

735*M$t. .199412256 ; 

•wice-wGrtfninfiririiirc^ 

■most naw and nMy to mm mio. Largs living room. 2 
horns.- $29,900; CALL DWtYNN TCOAT 


734-B500’ 1-800-658-3863 




1 


Con Paulos Has Several Makes.fib Models To Choose From 

with Prices Starting As Low As $5999! 

Register To Win A'ParhivaiCruise For 2, to Be Given Away Dailyl 



For Deisiii - No Purchts* Nscassery • Ad •kplfor4'4/9e 

ipc»| 


IDAHO 

JUST A SHORT DRIVE FROM ANYWHERE IN THE MAO^IC VALLEY! 






:ai^ Estate = 


HOUND POUND Try hypnosis. Ettoclivo & I CAREWORKERS 

TWINFAIAS allofanblo. COM Hypno- Twin Foils County hos 

OMIUAI <MC>TeQ Ihnr/in.. ttcl I— ll 'l.. 


TWJN falls. Roiocming- t'BUHL 
motivotod owner, got- 5 ACRES on Solmon Falla 


FOUND 

r Chihuahua X, whito I 

2 OfiUonyXriiw'&wtiilo. 

mote, w/ biuo Conor. & 

3. Lab X. rod (amalo, w/ I 


I Ihornpy Inaiiuclof. S2S/ openings for PT luvonUo 
session. Can Grp-9531. ■ cnrewothors, Solo House k 


sSSi HHHS 


113 

-CHILD CARE 
SERVICES 


„SI29.a00_^Bo/ow.#p- .iccoBo tS your lo'ncod- ^in 
^m/ss/;. Coll735^t>09ji -property w„h^, a own 160- l[?m StW StM 8S? 
TWIN PAU^: Cu.0 2 Pdrm ?3TsOfl.O?;gl'‘’' 


Mtingo wtm garden nton mi lUQni: dodid-pc 
4 various Iruii irooa on martir« trsillAi/ 

• Merrison Sti oui. No m r r * • HEA L E6TATC -^noyiC-wSIlGy- 

plumbing, largo kitchen 543-B806/543-6339 malts/' 

S3S.OOO, CallToFiya ' '543-4361 realty 

__L-8«>-2-»i-302a 734-1991 

ma^ic VallGy looking MoloQ-vLley*4 3-“''" - 

■“‘lil " ^ Stinko Rlvof Canyon ^“‘^I’O'"oon20ocroa. 

r©alty W/Iiwoatroom running mru sq. fl. w/pofloi tnsort; 

•70>l •frsrt’t ptopetly. Grant buMding ^oal pump, rodwood dock 

/ 04-1991 aito Ronitor owned'' wilwi luO, doinchoddbi 

___ SI 19.500. Call Archio Niaroa 

TWIN FALLS: Owner will Goodman 734-500t ‘"'an»0n wolor, 30 k 146 ft 

pay eloilno costsi 4 »95'02S12 snap w/ ronovniod barn 

bdrm, 2 V, bnlh, 2 -olory uMd for aiorago. OoauMul 

homo. 2 gna liropincos, HiaQIC VallGy 

eenirni nif rnmn.' .«-.m ^ - r boliovol Call lor otivaio 

d odk. - rtoiaTne^b ^ realty mdf.bJb-Lia’T j — - 

yofd. 2 car garngo. Froo 70A ~ ' 

approiaoi NowSt39,900 fO^J-iyai f S14 ri 

...Cn l.Slovo.Kohmopo- ■ — liNCOME PROPERTY)- 1 

CR6. CRS 734.1991 SUPQSR20oerolot.N.W | 

-«900«JI ™m«,7_W.y;5J.-3J«N; I 


4 various (ruli irooa on 
• Morrison Sti oul. Mggm 
plumbing. Inigo kiichon 
SOS. 000. Coll Tonya 
Backus 734-3 1 36. 
«99-01947 


543-B806/S43-6339 

'543-4361 

1-600-241-3028 


realty 

734-1991 


1 520 
REAL ESTATE 
■• - WAWTEQ 

" FAX 
- YOUR- 
AD 

TIMES CLASSIFIED 
□EPARTMEI^ I 

208-734-5538 I 


l|up.“‘ 

2. Auaam X. b(uo mono, to- 
maloptip.and 

3. Amo/ican Eskimo X, 

' "^turrs tomato put>" — 


I BO-PEEP DAY CARE 4 ago. hToT^S diK 

KINDERGARTEN, CED. somo child carS /y^ooPoTpo^"^^^^ 

' ‘CPR . K. iubr^S"Ssuil;^!r R^ySSa ''oCr S mll' 

'“SF 

3sy Csrs Csmsr has FT T^nF^Pa^^^ wUhlhobonontaolarurol 


3. Amo/ican Eskimo X. Csrs Center has FT 4ih Itoor, Twin Falls Coim- 

-TWira tomato PUB-— ^porimgsrCPf^tCCPT “ly Co-uri/»S.$i^?Sli^ 

^*‘**'*’*'^ ^’T4 lor moto Info. EOE 

Msr»yrtlc«csts4kJnensl 4 ..mail Chrislian onvuo* 4 Dtug Free Workplace 

LOCATFD runofll Call 734-4869 ■ ’ 

139 SlKthAve West' Cm^ninH k> CARPENTER 

736-2299 a^'i?nn i?i irn«.v. i ^ Plnish/LoaO Corpontor 

. AFTERNOONS OtlLVl SS^nmrni« -neadod.for AeUbllshod- 

Mooday-FiKtoy &f '’‘O*’ conalfucilon 

CLOSED Saiorday*. , company. Must hovo own 

Sunda^ 6 HolidiMn C{i>o,^_bi0 loots, tola 4 exooiianen 


t//V/7EP57a7g I I 
I POmiSERVICEl I 


buds for Onla Coiivnilon I 
Oporalorlostinglrom I 
Monday. August 2nd. ' ' 

1 999. ihrouoft Friday 
August Cth. 1999. I 


implolo componsallon |lo 5:00 PM ol: Twin Foils 
ickago looiuros: Ronioio Encoding 

40IK Conior, 830 Blue Ukos 

Great Hoollh Insuraneo I Blvd N. Twin Foils Main 


Mond^-Ftiday 
Closed Saturdays, 
Sundayi.6 Holidays 
Animala rue SOLO or 
DESTROYED atlo) 48 
hours, so ptonso can or i 


>^iiu»pour>d<lo.yto loving, fun 4 o.p. Ages 

ch^ily^rpotishoro. 1-5 Lou/I 734-I66S. 


lovlno. fun 4 eir) An«*B 1208) C22-702C 


* Paid Relocation 

* Compotlllvo Snlory_ 
Roqultomonis: - 

* Brlinguar (Proforrod) 


I Post Office at 253 2nd 
Avo West or Pionoor 
Post Omcoatl376 North 
Fillmoro. They must bo 


Experience In rocnrlilng jcomtfolod and turned In I 


-I Thi/s.-lM.-T-T.' IlTl I ’xwwnr.i >j«- tS6S. CARPENTRY I Sumos will bo token unlil [I efhlSk'nmnnnTu 


career in md Human Re- 
eoureos Inpuetry. Re- 
sumes wllJ bo token uniil 


I lO%nigRidlllereniial. 
Tomporaty 
positions are avail. 
Shifts ore poft-Umo, 


iodosetibo Orcomopick w/ your kids’ Iniorosie. 


magic-valley 

rpalt\7~"^ FILER plus Bod 4 BrooklasT. small 

L nTTACRESwrin asriaros~ *«'»"•« o«>0- 

734-1.991 . '’Ohf P‘lor. mobile NOME PARK 


734-1.991 "Off P‘i0f. ”0“' 

•• manuloclufod homos 'otmiisSWolT* 

TWIN FALLSt-Ro^olod '«'W't'0- Asking $59,500 
2 bdrm^ both idiiago MUNROE-ROBIRTS Rpourp^n rn 
,N.».r . 001 , pl.mbi:,,. REAL ESTATE «« oI w 

>;LrsScr£?rs 

KSr.Sri.5”IS --eSSJJJoas hOSERTi 

Kohnlopp. CRB.' CRS. i 
734-1991. »99-01870 i 


MOBILE HOME PARK 733-77SS 

3 units SW 01 Twin, show- I FLEETWOOD ’85. 3 bdrm. 


I HOUes''^°\ ._T*k»*»opubli-,Orvieo 

arMOuneomorx ot 
Tho Times Nows. 

3 Kmrnamr^.WT-- "oBasSTTraSST 

~oakwoo"dh"ome3 

no-TTss 1 


«'«>»• BP"09. 4 games CASHIER 
I Rols . Ceiloon 735-0895, Noodod PT. 32 hrs./wk 
I "W>u'4»'iSi. apply til 04B' 

StWly- Twin FsMs gOE— 

CHILDCARE 

]l r^ - l^ mploP;;cVi'^ ^Wen r ifesHeWs d 
Benefits, oir-lare paid. 


RE“u"“eo"?S'-!fSra. """ »-Tao77:w3», 

064 sq.ft, on Washington HANSEN - '95. 14x70 
St. North. . Flootwoed, Price roducodi 


St. North. . Flootwoed.Prica roducodi j 20^733-6300 S 726 455(a 

hOBERT JONES fax 

REALTY S2Q.OOO Can 423-6209 ■ I ' y^XX . 


PUBUC SERVICE CLERIca 
L MESSAGE PMIIono 

Deni pay lo lind work be- cultural ■ 
fore you got the )ob. For Bponaibl 

froo informoUon about clerical 

l^iding pmploymoni soi- lary cut 

vice scamo. write to the otc^’coi 

Federal Trade CommJs- loquiiod. 


i.7S>7. ■ senWiW your resume (o: wwk'.ApplicanliwSlbS 

“ Paifick Leadens roe leoaaaflwrtitKn 

Director of Human ToslwWrtv^hlo 

L[U.4’/*k^_ . Rpsoufott .cenduciad-inihe laiof — I- 

plyoi04B P.O.Box 439 pan el August and a I 

sUsSOB. — - Jackpot. NV 89029 M)lnofMfWfiie/iwiff-| 

Phono: (7O2>75S-6O90 be eivon ai 0 later * 

— Fax:.{70a)7S5.2724— - -daio.XtWmonrBgeis- 

repaid B-Malileadonsp®Coctus 18 or high school 

^my ■ „Eolo3-com _flh»du^.^w|W^, 

" " ^ STQDIAN 

0 In apri- ^lor School Disuict la lak- 

nice. HO- Ing appllcollons fof two EQUAL OPPORTUNITY 
sold Incl., (2j fui|.timo Custodians. EMPLOYER 

g. Invoft- Starting dale loMhosopo- 

service, sllions will bo August 16, l l 

r oxpor. 1999, Expofioncodosirod. I 


TWIN FALLS. By owner, j 


magic valley 'r"'"' 

realty "^. -SrKr S’KIilirr 

7.1A.1QQ1 ^V”£™',"TS°"S:i 

— square looiago Is over TWIN FALLS. 3 duplexes Wo have recMiA>»..«d 

TWIN FALLS: UNDER «<»• Ih doslrablo locoilon. -homos ava?mhfoJ^^ 

CONSTRUCTION single Priced S30, 000 below oAKWOfm 

slory homo w/approx •^«ta^DUCEDprte« appraisal, Will consider OAKWOOD HOMES 
1,338 oq.ll. locniodnnnr -proportylrodolor 733-7755 

CSI^F(wtJros3bdrm'8.3- MUNROE-ROBIRTS- “SIOO.OOpOQuily •.7348258 1 

boihs.gnshooi.AC.acar- REAL ESTATE ISSt '< 

garngo. Comploilon S43-6806/543-6339 f 515 

around 9/1, S89.900. Call 543-4361 I COMMERCIAL 

Art Jones 423-5415 1-800-241-3028 | PROPERTY IMQ' 

SSI I 

7*>A *f004 733-7755 Main Street. Currently Pursuant to Idaho Cede 9 J 

7J4-1991 rJ3-7755 The Store- features 3 67-2343, notice is hereby i 


YOUR 


skirt. Woshington. O C r.I”Di^r2 ^ Open until nilod. To apply DIESEL MECHANIC 

20560, or call Iho Nation- tag Hn-^on^’A conlaei Sandro Robons, Trucking Company needs 

nl Fraud lnlormftH«n f-««. ”n*Bllon ID 83335 FUor Sehoo DIstrto M13. mechanic. Wnnn nnp 


AGRICULTURE I 

Full time equip, oporolor. I 
Gooding oroa loodlot. I 


duced, 559,500 734-694 3 TIMES CLASSIFIED • * Irinoos; salary 

Afo have roposaossad DEPARTMENT ) rels,ioPcrS»x**n''Go^^ 
"homos available nowl 208-734-5538 ) ing, Idaho esaoo, 


•Socrolarial 4 bookkeepers daIpy 

rExpofloncod lull lime 


ID 83328 or (208)326-5961 ( 324-7600, ' 

'AIRY DRILLER’S HEy»ER 


DOE. Send rosumo w/ COLLECTOR qaiqv plo that wanl a chanb 


florago. S205.000, Coll OOODINO/HAQEHMAN. »95-01879 


I COMMERCIAL |SB*^^^*** 
PROPERTY IBS 

ub; PUBUC MEETING 

building. Located on NOTICE 

Main Street. Currently Pursuanl to Idaho Cede J 
The Sloto- toaturos 3 67-2343, noilce is hereby 
levels with elevator given of on open public 
oorvleo to all 3 levels 4 mooting of iho Idaho Fish , 
oodtng dock on m,oln and Game Commission, 
level. 5 39,500. CnII Arch- OATEOEHOTIC" 
[-lO-GOOdman 73T'5&0'l“ 'Jili^. 1^ 


' 208-6'77-4543 • “OP'Culture 

fRiIPIctX-^ l.Mdof& chopper operator. 

--touHLteY ) - ■ Pioaeocn)l 20B-423-ag69- 

Start doting lonlghtt hta- ATTORNEY 
I ho’s bolinn gome. i-BOO- Baputy Civil Prceecullno 
I ROMANCEk 97C3 Attorney -Twin Foils 

County. Must bo II- 


AQRICULTURE pon lor licensirtg purpose. Sudik Dairy 3<4 r 

Loodof& chopper ooeroter *^PT- Basic eompulOf_ _of Klmbofly.H 

^ DELiVERY DBIVi 

ATTORNEY 704 2nd Avo. N. UWo Caesar's no« 

Deputy Civil Prceeculing Twin Foils. ID 833pi 6ry drivers. AppI 


i oxpor. Apply In person loamhowtoooeminavn 
Sudik Dairy 3W mtlos So. ' loT ol muiS 

DELiVERV DRIVERS ' 

Linlo Caesar's needs dollv- J° “‘’''“"5® 


IdahV'ExtwrToneo in Ofowth 4 expansion. 
**pPHtiON lew reialing to local gov- opening In our commor- 

ALTERNATTVES ornmonts hoiplul .Salnrv clol dopi., entry level 

DOE. Submit resumes to Position, Apply In person. 
CENTER Twkt Foils County Human ho phono colls, ol Lyflb 


Resources. P.O. Box 126 -j.- v.., 

734-7472 " 600-371-7472 Twin Falls, ID 83303- TF. Drug froo work place. 

012 6. T win Falls County Yb ul fl nd s yirUw ni 
' ~Tiran E'quarOpporiuniiy Ingooi>rtng»intfi*eta*»mod' 
Employer and aDrug coiumns«v*ryday. Develoo 

Free Workplace. therooderhaiit 


no pnono colls, ol Lyflb 
SIpns. 1925 Kimberly Rd.. 
TF. Drug ftoo work place. 


ory drivers. Apply In per- 
son at: 820 Blue Lakes 
Blvd. Twin Falls. Idaho. ■ 

” FAX 
YOUR 
AD 


ourxpmpany. You need 
lo bo able lo lilt lOO 
pounds, and onioy work- 
ing outdoors at our drilling 
locations throughout 
Nevada. 

Ithis opportunity tor giowth 
interests you. and you ore 
drug-free, call 775-753- 


magic valley 

re alty 

734-1991 


Snake, Paved county -ruriu cm ■ e n session Is scheduled 

S7oVd?ern-|2^3G-men' Av^E-’ 3^ I '*TP"o.l.. Call Rortay 

a^ el^morosfSSL C°"D°>'«»«»T34.975d'M. tn^n^ Ts Ce^a^^e? |_V.ckors.RN. 736-2860. ^ 
'o's (5.'4 acres) N. TWO# FALLS: 1031 Ex- !»°n<I&|intriD. It will bri [~Amv THIEbewt 


512 

FARM/RANCHES/ 

DAIRIES 


AUTOMOTIVE 

OLube is accepting 
opplicalions lor a full iimo 
UiOo Tn ch. Aoolv in person:- . 
OLUBE 

947 BLUE LAKES N. 
TVifIN FALLS. IDAHO 


w clionis. Try my No phone calls pioasel 


of Gooding near Wood change - cdmmoreini oi.4;Ob pm by a ly Certlllod Massage 047 BLUE LAKES N. 

River. 536.000. 57000 building located on Wash- I®' Iho Commissicn iMrapist b now accept- TVrtN FALLS, IDAHO 

flown, p45 mon. ol 6S Ington Sl. Ni Curronllv 'P® SanOpoint Ing now clionis. Try m» No phone calls ploasol 

loosed thru Fob 2006 HfePo'V unique ocopiossuro and TiT rrMjfvnu.; 

592.000. Call AriJonos A Public hearing b schod- massage troatmonifor . 

Box 205, Palm Doasort, 423-5415. •99 01567 August II from 7 00 hoaOBChos.' 733-5298 Sx PP‘P'®' “*>1® to 

.CA.92261. - -MVR COMMERCIAL pm-lo 0:CX) pm aJ the Loo i ‘ . ..“;tgJ!gM-Pa'nl.4.1um.B0 

epnup 1 -j.c TT 734-1991 Hadley Rillo flange. UI4 ASSISTED LIVING has *IT®- ®vory two weeks. 

? * SPPfO lots Lake Street. SandMint. ID. 'ooras avail, lor elderly. p**p tools 4 spray 


^U -CA.9226t— ■_ -. ' ■ 

JEROME. 1,345 acre lots 


shod^s.'^corrolsMoll Tw?ri gmaXcai?ori“'^4-^^^^^ h^imf ' '^®'"'"®''- ’’’'I.® Commission meoHng 

Foil.,....'..,..!.,— _groai location. 734-940SB dal building, PRICE wH convene August I2 at 

Irfigniion well and spring. KIMBERLY 5 acres, near REOUCEOI Approx 9:00 am at Uio HawUiorno 

Lovoly homo with lots of conyon, power 4 roads. ~ r h h^i*'*'**' Cedar Sirooi. 


ilreot. Sandpoint. ID. 'ooras avail, lor elderly. 1 


good improvements. Afusi Reduced, 536,000 
aae fh/s oner Asking 423-4355. 

5245,000 

MUNROE-ROBIRTS ^®®"^ 

QBAt coTATc foicos sale. Choice vlow 

ESTATE Inl Plnnonfir flnii 


slob building on Eastland Sandpoint, ID I 

Dr. Well Insulaiod with PERSONS A'rTENDINQ: -wt Stoker at 734-6452. AUTOMOTIVE 

fire suppression system. Commiaaionors, Inlarlm [Buslnosaand/ertosidomlal f*AHTS/COUNTER PER- 


BANKRUPTCY 3661 or Milt 

Compeiilivo rates on Chap- 653-2368, M-l 

tor 7 bankruptcies Call 

JoW Stoker at 734-S4S2. AUTOMOTIVE 


flufts. Drug Free Workpl- 
oce Richard ol (208) 788- 
3661 or Milch, at (2081 
653-2368, M-F. 9am-4pm. 




■SSKSlifS? 


1-3028 agent Coll (208) 523-7585 I TWIN FALLS; Heavy In- session; waiorfowl rules: 
' ' Acreaoe. FYQl budgoirequeat 


cows. could Avo E., 5 acre parcels w/ proposed Inlotmodsl Rail lies may roouesl maatirm 

r<i A nni.in wslar nhnmk /nn.Axti Sila. 2annd U.9.'Unf>u„ .... 


Commission etiontailon CRIMINAL DEF&tSE-OUl I «^h Solos. 62 E.Front- 



OOODINO cifoi 1.5 ncro corner IQI in 

ROOM FOR COWS AND Ploasant Volley Subdlvl- 
HORSES. 1.7 ACRES 9'®" 529,000, Price In- 
w/clonn 4 neat older 3 eludes golf momborahlpl 


Silo. Zoned M-2-'Hoavy oceomrnodntiona bv con- ®ENEOLOOy ftoseaich.’ Buhl area. Experience In 
Manulseluring. 5200.000 laetmg iha Oireeior'a 0(5eo “ ' «nn1 find ygor lamUy AP 4 AR. Inventory 4 

Coll Stove Kohntopp, at the Idaho Oeoartmoni ot hbtory H won't cost you paytW Need to bo detail 

CRR rn.Q7-i/.ianV p:.i. ^ . Anulhinn iLi.. (uianiMf Pnw nne Ftn.l. 


Coll Stove Kohntopi 
CRB. CRS 734-199 
. •97-01813 

MVR COMMERCIAL 
734-1991 


I Fbh and Game diioctfy at 
208-334-S1S9 or through I 
Iho Idaho Relay Service nt I 
1-860-377 3529(TQOI 


nagic valle, 

BEAUTIFUL 2.13 ACRES rAalA* 

surrounded by mnluro Icdlly 

“.“=*1.““,"“ "“oT. 734-1 99'1 

romodolod/updatod 

w/nowor vinyl windows, rwiu fai i «i lu 
wood stove. 3 hrtrm PALLS. 1/4 acre 


r woodstovo.2bdrm. ,,L" j/ 4 acre 

$64,000 ^ powered shop/shod. 

SHOSHONE • 1047 Oosori Vlow Or. 

80 ACRES nil In pasture. S20,000. 208-734-70S7.B 
gravily lirigation. cross twin falls Pm xaia 
— .lOf0Q.ioi.Jo/ied.forJi4- 

P'®* w' 2S'XS2’ hoaiod 
manuiaclurod.homo, 2 shoo. ita-220 oawar 


TWIN FALLS: Prfnt shop, puQLiqM- Aiia.-ii i 
Includes commofcial o igM^ '' 

building, equipment, m- ' 
vonlory. cuslomor list 4 . 

Irolnlng period. Now fSS« 

S29S. 000. Call Steve 
Kohnlopp, CRB. CRS. |K(,ll 
734-1991. *97-02766 iMltA I'crxim 
MVR COMMERCIAL 

734-1991 J 


HOUSE CLEANING Pot 
care, laurtdiy, koolng, free 
estimaias. Short 543 -8102. 
HOUSE CLEANING 
Rafox. an]oy. Lei mo do the 
cloanInQ. 735-0677. ■ 


ADVERTISE . 
YOUR 

-SERVICE SPECIALTY 
IN THIS DIRECTORY 


— ig- ja-wi//. ■ />tK»duvlwiAer<eMnqaf 

NEED HELP WITH YOUR fOu'ctiOKol 
OUICKBOOKS7 

Can Teresa Ol 737-0087. 733-0931 


flat wom 4 form sotting for 
curb mochino, Wages 
St2-S14/hr, depending on 
oxpor. Some jobs pay 

- - Davis Bocon $24-525 par- 
hr. 208-232-9185. 208- I 
221-9314 or sondrasumb | 
lo36 to Hwy 30. W. Pflco- 
IBlIo, t0 6320I.B 


hiring Reel Truss Fobrl- 
coters 4 Sawyers. Coll 
Jim 01 324-eiOl. 


.Siijiplil L'liiv and \liii(ilc iiinMnicliiiii make ihi\ an 
cu.ypiiijn.1, It tncaMiicN.H inclic' vii.le l>y 48 iiitli- 
tall liy 2 I 1.5 inclic* deep. Tlie plan liieludcs eimi- 
plcte »tej»-liy-»ic(» l!j|^etjlln^ and a inaietu!\ li^i and 
L'lililn): whrdule. 

ITavli L'aa Shelter plan (No. .'40) , . . $7.vS I 
Pfillri J’n<Je«U Puckssr (Nil. OW) 

4 iiihrr'piiijcvik . , , S1M.9S 
CulalgiMp^iiev liiinJirdi iif pniKCKl . , , $3.95 
Til Older, ciiilr iKiiiiv). 1‘leaM- inelude )»>ur 
i lip A wnd w/ direk to; lume. addict and llie 
ll-niftl Frulum , natnrnrihl- n-v,.p .[^r 
r.O.-lliix 2310 I'ricev include ihkijm 
V»B Nu>.. CA 91400 and handlitii;. 

I1r»w illoB 3J orrkt fvr drtlirry, 

(■i.ti Orcoll(800)82.U.BILD ^ 

oov.uhlliljvm S> 


hooiod monufociufod/mowio you* od fori 

shop. 1 1 0-220 power. homo? We flifor Gnsn^nnt 11 Oh the firsti 

525.000, Coil 733-0289 QrStn Tr^ H«» « runs, os The 

0f733-6060B )| TImos-Nows is not re-1 

"■ -* J* spohsIMe for errw s 'al-i*'*** 

tor that time. I 


■Roy. 733-6340 liomb or PLEASANT VIEW Sub- 

SABAi_A mdos'sauin 1/VEasl'oi 

REALTY 

y733-A32i- DOSHIER 

one can - we'it eo It aiil bit A f •rxf 

CtessMed, 7330626. REALTY 

IDAHO - No. 14-442 - 90 734-2922 

a^s.M95.000. 96 acres TWIN FALLS, 
odjolntfig gov^nmonl WINDMILL HEIGHTS - 
londPLUSa 6,000 sq II.. • HOT AUGUST SALE' . 


EONMUtomyi 


ler maone nomes, 1978 Or F*uaii uvvir ha— in.-.i 
newer. Coll 324-4380 f 

FILER ‘74 Broodmofo. 2. 1wlnad®rrilcron.yl 

bdrtil., 2 bnlh. 21fl0 E. Whu yeu welling r 
3950 N, A6. 326-6507, Ptice Ihil elssillled 

.GUERDON ;ao^l4X60..^- ' - 

bdrm. 1 both, 510,000. LOST male Block Lab on 
Musi be moved. 788 1276 T-29. top/Shoshono Fans 

HANSEN ‘94 OoldonWest °'®*^®' TW1292 

hwo, 'Z bdrm.. VA bolh, LOST mole dog. O months 
AC.dook.8hod.manyos- old. Ooldorr Retriever, 



■$39S,000.'Noqhw05I.Nai: ' MANSEN-,Guofdon.1fl94,* .-'LOSTPrlneeTetvWs - 

, ilonol Real Esioio 1-800- HOSHIER 2 bdrm..2 bath, Rocket at Jerome Cltv 

685-102S.wwwjiorthwesl— -oppis, window covorlngs, ' Tennb courts 520 rowsm - 

-nnaonol.com/t0nd. REALTY, 525.000, 423-6858,B CoUSwS^!^ 

KlMBERLYaiOacrestn 2 1 734^2922 HEYBURN. 70 Governor, ^8T Springer Spaniel ' 

porcolsw/romoiollnkvnl- — 14x70. 2 bdrm. ) bolh. male. brown 4 wtilie.-naar 

ley pivois. Cai) Brad twin FALLS: Approx. 26 Force air w/AC. 513.750, Glenns Ferrv Rawmei 

731-5556. seres near TF with gated 678-4333. after 6:30pm. N 734-6641 ^ 


We have all kinds of sizes and styles in-stockl- -^ 

■Cargo Trailers; Auto Trailers, Motorcycle Trailers & Snowmobile Trailers 
Sizes Ranging From 4’x6’ to 24'x8’, Both Single & Tandem Axles 

Prices Starting At Only $1,39911! 

..'Register To Win A Cemiyaj Crulse.Eot2, to .Be Given.Away Dailyl 

L See Dtialer For OeUllt - No Purenase Neceisary • M eiplret 8/4/90 


Kohnlopp, CRB. CRS. JEROME 1 or2acres.mo- 
- ■734-i99irir90-02C64 — - <-bke.-d6l.wlde . earport.-pa- - 
_ii llo. 3 bdrm.. 2 bath, gas. 

mSgiC VSllGy S7SK, by oymoL ^4-8453. 

roalts/ For that weektrid hldeswsy 

leauy ycuV* always dreamed 

TQA-iQOi stah your seerch in the red 

fOH l»»l esUleoolufmaoldatNIled. 


._REMEWBER 

That birthday gd you placed 

' Tknos-NowBT^wiSlho 
dmo to come pick up your 
picture Step by Tho 
Customer Sorvico Dept 
today! 


IciSoulftUf 

JEROME, IDAHO 


^ WISounUfteofij 

^ SMC IDAHO 

JUST A SHORT DRIVE FROM ANYWHERE IN THE MAGIC VALLEY! 


324-3900^ 





DRIVER DRIVERS . OnrvFRR • - 

D^r wontod lof root# a*- CDL40Tflo*Ber prt. OTHDSL,r«ww^ u 
llvoiy 4 day* a wMk. 40 fair»a. tbam or ulo n«!» nwJoa. Vans, 

hour work wooka; pro- tfucka, S&S ^p?21; ^ f“nn‘f*0 48 atntos 

ompioymontloatino.phyi. 208-532^807 loa^o*ml? floors, ronnlno 

Ictraglllty/afuQ iCfsan, - ' ** 'f Wostorn iiaiw.Tank- 

S8.8<Vfv.*8,0a^r.w/das# DRIVERS VSk"”?'.".? 

li!!!!S°ESS«»!l!NnY S3^'"o.feS: 


ELECTRICIAN 

ELECTRICIAN 
MILLWRIGHT 
Nampa, laoho ■ 


JUVENILE PROBATION UANUFACTURINO 

n! opplicalions lor la o»panding In Oooa.nn . 

lo work KrlJ^’^gT Probailon Imr^Sinio oponlng* l§r 

, ? , ■ **** '**" Olilcor-Tfie luccossiui Food Procossino 

to bonw sarvB oor candioaio w^ii hovo bacn- Equipmoni Opotniots 


DRIVER 

Experloncad short haul 
drfvsr, Call 208-324-7I25- 
ORtVER 

Local company. Nssd 
Class-A COL 9 wostsm 
Blalss. Balt trailer. Call 


' ' DRIVER 

Now hirirtg for Mixor Driver/ 
Laborer. niH time, banaflis. 

OassACOL&TSN 
endorsement req. Apply at: 
- tOo»pfHlno.-7St Midrona 


axperteneed Iru^ driers i 1 (wceuent oen« 

f or Local hauling/Paciflc 40100 wtth 50% « 


HIRINO EXP’BAINEXP-D- 
' DRIVER8I 

✓ CDL Tralnit» AvaUablel 
Von & Ratbed 
Opportunities 

— Greet ray 4 Benefits' 
✓Assigned Equipment 

✓ Consistent Miles ; 

✓ RkJer Programs * 

✓ Job Stability 

Join Omar Aragon To 
Discuss Career 
Opportunities 
FRIDAY. AUO.O 
IIAMlotPM 
Beit Western Canyon 
' Springs Perk Hotel 


om 4 other beneflis. tutor. Is looking tor an ex- 
Frelghillner classics 4 perlencod professional 
. Century doss. Teams are ^Ot awing end graveyard 

welcome. Mso looking lor with the following 


luiof. Is looking tor an ex- " «W"“n«s..wa erecitofl untversiiy or col- 

perlonsed professional •‘"Owl- logo In criminni.luilico. 

lor evring end oravevard ®“BO .of Mnctntosh com-. .- boravloraJ scienco or re- 
shirt with the following Eli!!.' loled/leldoranrKjulviilcni 


siiy or col- inclined 4 ablo lo work 
nl.luillco. shittwork S9-t0/hr OOE 

inco Of re- • good benefits. Appiym 

oQuIvfllcni person on Tuesday, Item 


MEDICAL MEDICAL 

CNA s wanted in Twin BtidgeViow EsLUu!! la cur- 
FnlU, or NA's with t2-mo tonlly sookinp CNA'a willi 
exp 734-1660. 734-444S oxpotionco rfi long lorm 
MEDiCAi cere Full nnd pfirt-lrme 


relief drW. If Interested quallficailoni: Iwo wqars I and combination of oducaiion 2-4pm, m 1726 S 2300 E MEDICAL 1 1 positive work environ 

•'csil 208-734;9062.» finduelrlalVxperienco “anO'wofli'OkpCfioneo-. “ Gooding Idaho or cdli^'PT' POsnionovPn 


mechanical ond olacirlcal 


wiihwiiii. rioymon oiocifWB license 

- >• Woodgroinol- 


Iniioiiaiion. KoubfoshoCi- LTL-J???® ”®*' **' 

Ing and ropnir. a proven m 

record of steady etnploy- TJ'"t^^**** 

hW^pnonaimSn-- — 

T*i"F-iS.i“.ss««., 

(Of foelprocal statol Jour-' <✓ fax to 208-734-5538.. 
noymon olodrleal license ********. 


SJJht' rt of the Juve- 733-7555 ext tWornn 

**■ oyslem essoni- inierviow oppl. AA/EOE 

„ «'■ Mall eppllcallons and , Drug freg'^rk piece 

The TImea-Newa resumes to Human Ro- ^ 

— -aoufees;-P.OrBox-f28.- uABi/cnMft 

PO Box 848 Twin Folli. ID 83301 or WARKETINQ 

TwlnFelle.1083300548, 4th floor of the County Brokerage Rep 
or fax lo 208-734-8538. Courthnusa ai 40A AhA«. *''oik with Insuconco agents 
“TTTTTTrr::" hona St. «.. Twin Falls. ' ^ P'’®"® 

nSuSot **** OoadHnalsAugusi2.- Wo Imln no Iravol 
DRIVERS ^ggg Twin Falla Coufliv Crow with Insuronco 

DRIVE INTO A STABLE ' I# an Eoual Oooortunltv Notvroik America, o i 
INCOMEMI nnilonal wholesaler 

• Earn 530.000 par Veer Fiaa Work olaea * In Boise Bose • Incontivos 


Greet pey • 1 SI year up to 


NorthwetL COL required. 
Excellent benefit peckaoe 
4401K.8aIe7 OOE. 
Please apply at: 

. .903 Elm. Buhl. 10. 
ofcall^06-543-430e, 


DRIVERS Needeilll 1999 
Potato Season tru ck drtv- 
eia. pciato'pllere. clod 


Meal s/1 odging tor those 
living outside a SO m6e 
rulua from dots 
B0O>JDIN.WaE 
(800-4044973) 


, Is required Woodgroinol- DRIVERS ***** 
fore on excellent wage qhiwp .mtb a «taa, = 
and banellti package. * STABLE 

Send resume to: *c5®?S'JLv 

• Earn 530.000 par Year 

Woodgraln Mlllworh. ! 

P.O.Box 9489 * Wa Will Train You 

Nampa. Idaho 83652 Qick Simon Trucking 
ATTN; Human Raso urees OfivOf School 
ENQINEERINQ 

Parly Chlef/lneirument X 465 

Operator. POWER Engl- Ff******* 
neera Inc., a conaulKno 

engineering company HAIRSTYLIST i 

aaeks a Pan Chlel/mtiru-' ‘■coking iw queiifled aiyilsi 


shills. PloAso apply in 
borosn at Oridgoviow Es- I 
faios, 1028 Brldgovlow I 


. • benefits 
For recorded details 
call (208) 338-492Q. . 


* Consiruction 

* Fofkim-aii Shiite 

4 Santtaiion/deanup 

* MechonicaWsldera 
lOpen Mon.-FrI.. 8 om-5 

pm., Sal., Oom-1 pm.J 


Medical t"" 

fcome {oin our tsam 4 t 

/ happy environment. {MEDICAL 
[ Twin Felli Cere Centar iNoodod. 
IS now taking appiieniions I RN.S22' 
lor CNA's. Full lime or LPN, Sl£ 
‘partrimoposltlons CNA's Si 
nvniinbio. Long-term care Special i 
experionco IS prolorrod. I Conioct 

• Hire on Bonus / Gooding 

• Groat Bonolils Ing Conio 

• Cempeiitivo Solanos 

Slop Oy for a porsonol In- MEDICAL 


I on experionco CnN Tere- 
sa at 730-3933 or apply lr^ 
person at BtidgoViow Es- 
.iaioa.-!628.Q{idooviuwi_ 
I Blvd, Twui Falls, ID. EOE 


RN.S22-S24 per hour 
LPN, S15-SI0 per hour, 
CNA'a Se-S9 porhOur 
Special program avail.' 
Contact Tony Miller oi 
Gooding Rehab and Liv- 
ing Conlur. 034-5001 


Expof. moiotcycle/ATV/ Night shlli charge nurse, 

snow machine mechanic. ' g Magic Volley Manor, 

Apply In personal Suzuki Drive. 734-4264. EOE. 2O0-53G-OO23. 


Apply in parson ai Suzuki 
Polaris of Twin Fails. 2540 
Addison Ave E.. TF. 


Truck drtvar • 48 atete op- J -pickara. Long go^ I ACOMCAR INOUSTRtES 1 ee office, o^icanis must ] appllcatton end /oin I DPDOmUAiet 
aratlon. axe. equipment. I payl For more lilfo., call I COMPANY EOE f have three years expetl- ) {“HPOwlng salon el • »FTOt//V/VCfc 


11 PKvAve. 735 Overland. MECHANIC 

87*4040 MMSJ^ceMmStanlep 


aratlon. axe. aquipmenl. payl For more lillo., call COMPANY EOE 

.I^Jralght0aeera7*-30er -Cunw*».Parme43a4678.- .. - -i.-. — rrr- 

permllas. 800-058-5212 Dffmrs 

or 208-280-7181 if no an- ORIWM WSE 

■iWirteM'mKT”-^ North-side Boe Co.-rfner- - Wur]i~‘^aSr;ni.;77 

2! Jerome, now taklno aooii- _wuiia Shew Expreea 


. ■ " ■— Jerome, rww taking appii- 

DRIVER eallona for echool but 

TRUCK DRIVERS Cfaaa A. drfvere forme 1999-2000 
-New ProgramI Flat bed aehool year. Part time 
Operellon. Company work. COL required. Will 
Ortven/ Owner Operatori. train. Call 208-324-4420. 
Lease purchase. Mitchell 
Bfoe. 888-234-0405. 552^1?*® . 

OTRCIataACOLquallfled 

★ •★★★★★★★Or dilvert. 8 Wesiem 4 

DRIVERS Canada, /tome tMefC/y. 

Exper. Flatbed DrJvare Alsoneed raliafdrivara. 

needed: for Ogden. Utah ^®®' bonut. *600 aafoty 
based Co. Minimum of 2 bonua poaalble. Lata 
yra. OTR exper. required. d*b<Iel equlpmenl Cal/ 

-•Derate 11 weium Slales Nomeas-MS-repo. 

•Co.ConMbuledPro«8fiMhg ■ 

• Paid Vacation DRIVERS 

•Ouarterfy Fuel Bonus Owner • Operators 

,• Dctver Reerultlno Bonus , ROCOr 

■ Paid Reefer Fuel i 

* Heaim Insurance ■ 

•KecnaonAwaoeef 7-IOOeyt «i YearLeaae — 


se offtee, appiicanis must PERSONNEL ’ »"fcn oesn tor rrtecham. i»d®*M''togiWPl)caltorts 

have mree yaara experl- S" *' cal 4 hydraulic eoulo. Be- 'w.® toll time Rn for the 

■enee-m^oflstrueftan . -te— — Heg it . T r yi-ft oea, _ . PLUS — “sta-knowtedge ofTsme' 4 — toOhishlftrLong-iertnoate 

pogrophlc mapping end uoyei - - mill work helpful. Send re- swlsnce Is preferred, 

boundary surveying, e*-,,, p„,», a„._ LABORER . iume to: ATTN' RE- • Great Bonofils 

«•- a ^^'^ed^-" ■nteClYOfTwInFiJ/i-liM. SUME.-PO Box 24017 
?a°nnfi«°wr*IL*-' oWlarv Of AmetJstar Cosl- cspUdfl appllcaUene fora Twin Falla, ID 83301 


drivers enjoy: ■ 

* istdayhealtrvdeniai ' 
insurance 

l.lOOmlleavg. length of 
haul 

' Pay afisr every load 


Oaori nanaW^nJiA.^ no. a wholly Oxvned Si*- ^®CltyotTwihFaJ/iliac- 
naaafiawr I .aaX A^nerlsw cS- «P‘"'0 ®PP“c*Ueni for s 

A c,^ ^ b»®- b*® ‘b Immediate •®®«''^ laborer lo work 

PQWCR opeomofore FRONT OF- Of me l^nlclpal Golf 

AHirMH P& floI*tr5m^ FICE SUPEfiVtSOR. Course. Thie Is an hourly 


cepilng eppllceUona lor a Twin Falla, ID 83301 ‘®f ® personol In- 

f eesonal laborer lo work ~~ fellow ond fill out an op- 
al me Municipal Golf MECHANIC 5” Eosllond 

Course. ThIe Is an hourly Mechanic needed. Fully Drivo. 734-4204. EOE. 


Hl"ev”?6 M333’'or®?if' Succeselol candIdSee P^l'ton. approximate^ exper. Muet have own 

enowld ooaeeea atronn 40 hou re per we ek loole. Full Service shop.' MEDICAL 

ton,p-lL.«lll,. SS |»<»»SI. 1». -pj 0/ Ih. 733.21MB »r 734.5001, 

AN EEO/^ EMPL?>YFft' I •••‘•V- ‘Ike desUng with »*ason. ForeppIleeUenor MECHANIC irF/JUn ?i 

fcfcO/AA EMPLOYER I w uriher imorrnetion. con- ICF/MH li 

rof Swing shiftl Having We Personnel Office T®srt ®.por, 

ptevloue “rent desk au- •" City Hell. 321 2nd Ave. 'orearta|Fu , 


rtePats I EQUIPMENT 


Consulting psyehoioglil 4 
dieticlon needed for 
ICF/SiR In Joromo. Con- 


COMPANY EOE 
E-MAIL your daseifled od 
tdueai 

. twload^mleroanei 

EDUCATION 

Magic Hoi Springe Youin 
C am p I# 


wisory and/or hospital- '^“"® b'J'bO'’® HOUSEKEEPER MEDICAL 

ex^iencelaadenmie ”8-2251. The Ch^ Hospital Housekeeper, full FT dietary uilllty aide Fill 
is. but not mandatory. * ‘L®? ^b^MOp- time position; weekends out ODdllcatione at ' 


We are a mem based am- pohuniiy Employer. Drug 
plover that oflera compel- Free Workplace, 


. — — .....yu iiiynanoo. rormore 

- from 4am-4pm; possible eailVleiilB34-560l. 

itive wages. flexiUe hours. LABORERS evening shift coverage. 

end great beneflia (that backhda piMimuiruT Experience preferred. MEDICAL 

tncfudoeoiKandpaldre- OPEMtorba"' Apply at Si. Benadlels Immediate opening lor a 

tocaoon): beet of all. ro^ SPLICERS naadan Mi.m Family Medical Cenler. full-time charge RN. 2 

advancement rive a vwu drlvem *’ T09 N Uncoin. Jerome. ID yaari supervisory expert- 

opporfunniei,... _B3338 prejemploymBnL ®nc®-Preferfed^Sa|nry., 

-Iea««-mali/fax your re- - encourBoedlPTbolv ln~ phyai^end dorg screeri- -■ depehdsuponexperleneei 
DeSrn at2l^ tarn redulrodEOE, Call 733-3700. extension 

Patrick Leodens 232 or 234 for more Info. 




DRIVERS IDEAL, Inc. Itpurranily 

Exper. OTR drtvers warned. «*P«n«in9 6 have a won- 
Teom, Solo or Retief. ?®'tol opporlunliy for a 
New equip, heaftn f«v special O/O'i. An dH- 
ineuranee. fuel 4 safety Wi»ed miles paid. Insur- 
bonusei. 888-808-5785. program 4 graat 


ITTr — • tophisoeaied raHrood 

4 rl! . ' .. malntananco equlpm- 

Bp/lnoi Youin _ ent. if you have me- 
I S a i raptln gji^. -.'ehohlcal. ability, an lrv- 

I for leecher. K-i2. letesi In me railroad 

90 foroppolnimenL and enjoy worktno 

wiih large equipment. 

nON Loram amy nave an 

erelry of Idaho ?rS?2i2jr"T T®" 

Isas?*""'’" 

$2000* per month 
• InYura^e benefiia 


The posUon wia nave live- 


I opporfuB«iei_.. _ 
Jffeaaa-mali/fax your r 
•ume to; 

Patrick Leadens 
Director of Humon 
Resources 
P.O. Box 439 
JeckpoL NV 89825 
Phone; (775)7554093 
Fax: (775)755-2724 
EOE M/F/OAf 


- BncoUfBgedierBbpiy. in~ 
person at 2123 E. tSth. 
Street, Buriey, Idaho. 


709 N UnMn. Jerome, lb years sirper^sory exporl- rpa 

83338 DrejemploymBhL ®a®®-Pf®!Bypd^Sa|ory. ASn; Personnel 

physical anddnrgscreen- - depandsuponexpetienee — 4e8-0-ShauDAvn-wa*T 
required EOE, Call 733-3700. extension TwW FaMs. ID MM? 


MEDICAL 

Nursing Unit Msnsger 
Slate Hospital South In 
Blackfoot has a loodor- 
! sh/p opportunity fora pro- 
fssslonil RN. Under the 
— direction- of the ONS-anff— 
In conjunction with mo 

of 0 unit loodor jiip loam. - 
this Individual \rvos as 
24-hour unit maflbgor ol 
nursing sinlf through oub- 
ordlnnio supervisors. Wo 
ollor compoinivo salary 
ond oxcelloni bonolH 
package. Applicoiions 
avallobfe oi Job Service. 
For Informoilon coll Jill 
Villarroil, Human Ro- 
sources, (208) 765-8480. 
EEO/AA 


needed full lime. Must 
- have experionco In 
exercise field, colloge 
degree desirable. Send 
resume ASAP lo: 

CPR 

■An n ; Personnel 


(medical, dental 4 Me) 1 [ HOTEL 


DRIVERS 

-Immed ia tely opefl ing, ixis i-' 
don for exp. drtver 4 owti- 
or operetora, COL. 46 


DRIVERS 

Bar Truok Orlvltti 
Sehoef In Bithi. Oassj 
CDL er'refreeher ceura< 


Yeut ad will resell 82,OOi 
Itmlllei eviryday and tlii 
rsiulla will sffitzs yeu. Cai 
__today.and.ens oi.eur Mena*; 
Ad-visers mD help you won 
yeur od so mot it wO bs mos 
tilietlvo and bring yeu ihr 
roMRs you am looking lor, 

DRIVERS 

Orfve for a company amal! 
enough to know you but. 
largo onoueh to peyyoul 
•COLREQUIREOl 
•540K to 5S0K por Year for 
Good Runnera 
~'D80tbktad'Ruht'wlth 
Fringo Benefits 

r-000459-7378 ■ 


ance program 4 great flock managomant and - 4Qi K plan • Travot •[ Mourtuirt VWaoefleoori 

,.n, F„, JSSKr"' 


eOD48t-7i9t7«.-ioo«-|-®*'®*P*«hm county end- 
Olsiriei III as assigned. 
Educator wid develop rol- 
' oducaiionai pro< 
tnu-basod-ornaeBr • 
priorities end coordinate 
programming with and 
through olher Exienslon 
Educatofs. Exlanalon 
■SpeoBIBts and local adi^4~ 
scry eemmitiees. Mai- 
ler's degree required in 
Agricultural Scanemles, 
Agricultural Education. 


LABORERS 
General Laborers-men 4 
women needed lor the 
loilowlng posiuons; 

* Warertouse 
•Mkl Workers 

* Forkllll 

* Meat Wrappers 
‘ Bean Sorters 

Apply In person at: 


^GEOandoeurreru erFax"ra«7m« 'ifiBha 

^SderM*’"** T74-3647ormaiiio!o^! ”i 

to apery lor Bris we certr • t-b>aLMgr_.P.O.-8oiuiS0.- LABORERS 
tact os toon u wsL Stanley. Idaho 8327*. Help womed; 

KOUMKEePlNO 


CNA'S needed to join our *^®ueni^A. eno.A. 
family, compaililva wag- 
es. beneftJa ovaiiabie or- ■ 

lerOOdays. CAII634-S601 M®olc Valley Reglont 
ask for Siacey Medica] Center Is curren' 


Bvailoblo, FT eve. 4 nighi BA or MSW degree. Pre- 
nave a I iiA Ml. i__ f-rV _ — . I r'pprym person at’ I Bhih, Please pick up ap- lerrod background ini 

■^®«T®-}- -PUcatton ai.ia2a-aridge-- -W“'«".SoeipT.vnjrk,.flg-, 
ef!^^asu?Sit?M2^^ ^mFMleAvi!^ view Bivo tf, Bri^o- I'^.w^hea^.ortran- 


I MEDICAL 

RESPIRATORY THERAPY 
SUPERVISOR 
Magic Volley Regional 
ModieoJ Cenior Is curronl- 
ly looking lor a fuil-ilmo 
Respiratory Therapy. 
Supervisor, Musi bo - 
Crodonilalod In NBRC 
ond ilcensod In Idaho. 


view is an EOE. 
-MEDICAL CODER- 


s'su/ra 


iruek 
dear 
dfivir 

pay. benellts. medical, 
dental. 401K,. rider policy. 
4 all conventional modem 
equipment. If you ore 


about their em^oyeee 4 
thek home time, then look 
no further. Call Dave at 1 • 
8(M4ei-7161.exL103.a 


A80HBR8- ^ CODER ^ wprli-requlred wilh erh* t — oxperfem wefMrpd: 

iolp warned: exper. loader ft/pt Coding poslilon: phosle on Individual 4 Wo offer comoetlthra salary ' 
ooeroior. A/se another po- Prefer ART, CCS. CPC group counseling. and Mcollmt boneftta ^ 

sitlen lor laborer, 208- C'Bdeniiai or 1-2 yri ex- Wo oilBr e eompmilvo sal- Indudino' 

768-4525. BeDevue area. PBflencelnlCD-9-CMand ’ ary ana excalleni benefits HealtrvDeniai insutanea 

r A.A,rAA4AA.A.a ^ -£/Mxodlng.-Exlenslve- -lr>duding — 

I • knowledge, olmedloolfef. HeoliWOeniai ihtiuronce Ufa/Disobiiiwmsurance 


wiuyv nuQo m iwn ....... a pouovueoreo. KVP-v--vw«iiwi/-v<.-mano ' ory ono oxcoiieni oeneiits 

-Falis.-The y e a n pror - ~ — -£/Mxedlng..Exlenslve -Irvdoding—^—— 

vide you with en appii- MAirnEI^CE ' ‘knowledge, olmedJodfef- HeoliWOenial'lhtkirance' ' 

canon and teheduie 1®. ® P" *- ^PP*y Pysw> Looking Ipr exper. lawn minelogy. anelomy end Paid Time Dlf Plan 

on upcammg interview iSSySl*®??);! !** ®®.??- "tohohce workert. phyeioiogy ond diseese Uo/Olsabiiiry Insurance 

wiinaLorom 1893 Cenyonsprmge Rd. Solary DOE. Slant condlilons ore required. Retlromoni 

roproMniaitve. INSTRUMENT Irpmedlaiely. ■734-9243. Compeiliive wogo end infoni Core Center and 


AnimorScreneerRong; INSTROliiN? _»gmeog;eiy.-734-8. 

Mpnogomont. Voierinory LAiram MwritBnance SUPERVISOR maintenance 

Sd«M)ce.-or.cia««iy-ie(a<~ • — Of-VMyt-'nc. Hofnem Cement, teekina Mainicnonco person 
Od field. For more Infer- ^ Opponuntty .? 


matlon and a position 
coney onnouncoment. coll 
Iho University ol Idaho. 
Twin Falls Research ond 


Compeiliive wogo end infoni Core Center and 
I Refits. Appileauons oe- morel 
I bepted inrough August For more information 
13, 1999. Seryf rosume or ploosecontoci: 


I tmpreyor paid od | molnionaiKe ot aulomoi 
* od industrloi eleciri- 
EUROPEAN TAILOR 


ing. gioundt 4 general ynoML 

I maintenance req. Solory annin 

I pOB w/ beneflis. Possi- 


apply ai Si. Bonodlcis 
Family Medicoi Conier. 
709 N Lincoln. Jerome, ID 
83338 pre-omploymoni 


Wendy Anderson 
MVRMC. Humon 
Resourcas 
P.O. Box 409 ' 




stfy of Idaho is an AAIEO ®®* ^ 

I executive ASSISTANT 
"* F ull timo, o ccasional 

- uveiiui>«-sacca6Siui-9x~ 
porlence dealing with 
public Computer compo 
lent. Usl programs vrui'i 
prolidomln. M 


I process Instrumentalion. Cindy 01788-2134. 

BS preferred In Qecuical 

Engineering UANAOEME/TT 

Moniono Job Service Human services agency 

121 N. wsison Ave seeks an outgoing, won- 
— BcwrTOn.-;MT.59715 — 

- eo Indivlduor to m. 

OR ot jsd.dll.tWo.mt “ 

Job order *42(){} 

Equol_OppofTuniiy 


e5 In^vldusrtp rrianage { ty looking fora lull-time ' ' ' 

Coder Tn out Koollh 


(206) 737-2008 
FAX (200) 737-2741 
!NDYA(giMVRMC.OEN- 
..ID.US 
EOE 


Ufo/Disabiiiiy insurance 
Rettromem 

Infoni Core Comer and 
morell 

For more informaUon 
pioase contaa: 
Wendy Andorson 
MVRMC. Humon 
Resources 
P.O. Box 409 
Twin Foils,' Idaho 
63303-0409 
(208) 737-2741 
FAX (206) 737-2741 
WENDYA®MVRMC. 
OEN.ID.US ' 

- EOE 


j fwrthern eouniics, Musi MustboART 


It's AU 


St>ii Inlii yiiiir LaaI Amijr 
Kr*vuilinx infill- wi-l find 
|iut iM-wynu i-AnrAm ' 
k* miH-li BN S.VMSXI tirf 

ndk-ifr. 'ninniKh IN- 

MnnlKixni-fytilllilliilii, . 
Ihr Army tnlii-vi- Fund, 
J)x‘ Amty t BO tH'l|> A-BM- 
llx'finBnviBlbunirnid ' 
K"inj: I" iTillfw. And. 
mm- imiRirLiiil ilutn iIm- 
mituT.yTiur Anny »rfviiv 
will Krvryini Ihr lilnd<.>il 

cxiXTli-nn-K IhBl «wi ukr 

yuakwixwiytiiwartU I 

■unvrM, In ndJrtfrBnil I 

I hryimd. Si »lr|i fnrwiml. I 

SwyiAirliB-Bl/Viiiy 
KnruiliT firr (li-tBil-E, I 

■(«08)‘733^267i" 


l^^irfc'Te^ W%7k^‘e2 l«9 supe'rVrtiron and 

wolor SllOAonrhr a LocoI I nsixanco ogoocy I s pre)oct monogsmonHn- 
bonellli EOF S currently looking lor o FT CJudIrvg eompiloUon ot ro- 
reSumotoB?* 90492 .^EHlENCEOIrxfMdual ports, wdbe^ to work 

Box S4S Twin PniiA compuler Meroie. ot leosi 30 hours per 

Idaho 83303 0548 oxeellw people okifis. week, up lo 40 hours at 

uo«e. Must be oWe to work 8mee. Must bo oMe to lift 

«r «tr« iummer kelp, run Indepertdenilv. 50 pounds, hove redoblo 

V ed to dastlttod. frs letL SeloryOOE Irensoorioilon. Anniv tn 

" Sendresumeto: South ConPal Community 

works, C«B TMrOWt. p.O. 8ox 5881 Action Anonm 728 Khri 

ARM TVrirt Fells. IP 83303 shone SL W,. Twin Fells 

xporfence swalhor 4 bol- JUVENILE PROBATION houM^BSSSSSn?' SrJli 
or ooernlors. 334-7I2S officer t ??_“»? BasemenL before 


resume lo Box 90492. 
%The TImes-News. P.O. 
Box 548, Twin Falls. 
Idaho 83303 0548. 

Ler «iu« iumm«r help, run 
an ed to dntRM. fTs letL 
ll'B Ineisensive. snd It 
. works. C«B 733,0831. 


Knowiodgo Of ICD-9-CM T— TSIqb-bT- 
4CPTcodlr>gsyslDms. * ill OlaCK 
modica) tetmlnolm. cltoL Join the DorigoM 
cal modidrto 8 our now Jerom 


8e White ^ 


w/ Form equip 4 Wgolion. otoce 
Familiar w/ heavy 
construction equip. Woae 
benefits 4 housing pro^. f^^““ 


Health Insunince Clerk. 

Compuler kteteie. 
excellent people skiBs. 
Must be able to work 
Independenily. 
Salo^OOE ' 
Sendresumeto: 
P.O. Box 5881 
TVrirt Fells. IP 83303 


OFFICER t 

Appiicailorv)ob doscrlpUoo 
available el Minidoka 
County. Recorder's 


Must be etAxnltted Abtarevtuhns bring stteevtsl- 


hospital coding ei^ortoneo 
prolorrod. We offer e com- 
poUilve salary and 
oxcolfonl bonofits 
Including: heotth/Donial 
Insurance 
Paid Time Off Plan 
Ufe/Disabilliy Insurance 
Retiremeni 

Infant Coro Center and 
morel 

For more Information 
pleese contact: 
Werxfy Andersen 
MVRMC.Humon 
Resources 


I 'resdBrs.understind yeiit_ <09 


TiAt FelliVlD £9303-0409 


Ran^RWdl0.IO 208- S?mor?*ruS.«Thi| 


our now Joromo Evspetator 
Piani Kheduled to open n Augusit We' fro currently Mokmg: 

Maintsnance Electrician (1 Openln's) 

Mutt hove strong PLC «» porlor> c e and vcollenl compuler okdt. 

Machinists (2 Openings) 

Must bo ikOod n botor miintononce wicri good mtowni ino pitM 
mBrwgwnotV sUa. 

Productlon/Maintenanco Technicians 
(13 Openings)^ _ 

Mitt h«w o i c o linr mecftoni ci l one prectom lo^ twfc bw ssety 
n »crt u rtquvoo In boei ew prcducson ond marcarunco sidti oi 
M opaaKn. and • hi^p achod dpi^. PrenM vporMnes ii 

B nwnESaekxtog atawonnars prolarrod. Eioananco In maIntanatKe 
uxiitaS dam In manutKiunne'iachndogr or iacTMal 
goptot. M poanors rogun 0 corrmmwni u quaky 
a contlnuoui 


JOIN ip XEAM 

WHAT WE HAVE: 

•TOP PAT IN THIS REGION ' 

•GREAT BENEn'TS 

■■•LATB MODEL KW AND VOLVO’S 

•OUARANTEED.Tl]^ OFF 
'•RIDro PROGRAM ^ . -L_-_ 

WHAT WE NEED: 

•CDL WITH HAZARD ENDORSEMENT 
•MINIMUM 6-MONTHS EXPERIENCE 

• CLE AN DR IVINO RECORD 

' Edwsrdi Bros, Inc.' - 

l795N.Holmea 

'ld^Rilli.ID8340} 


Tlmes-Newel$notre-| »to>rker» n^- VrtNDYA®MVnMC-GEN- 


l FARM I sponsible lor eirore ol-J "'®"V*^im)'i8 

*tm»g>w.ny I ^ experienced | torUiulw | finS'Ave!'^? 

■ ancoi required. Houee ■ - 

EascKSXi f PLEET ^ 

Located In Cdmaa County X J leehnidan for irg deity. * _ _ * 

wlthoerioralcroppr^uc-- &‘Par‘®teed.w/referencoe BS -Bl 
nion. form and ranch man- and/orresum«.324-48fl7. .■■§> MM BIB MM U0 

agemenL community do- Sian on ot before 9/1/99, ■ • ■■ Bm 

velopment. and youth rvowo -r 

rwponeibamei. Educator To Service established Commercial 

wffl develop reievani odu- and Reel accounts for southern Idaho’s 

and «»oi?lljSito Mechanical aptitude a superior mBnufadurer and company 

-rnlng with other ^eriMOT Ptot. Qood pay. flexible support. . 

Educators. Ektonslon Heu*;/B“ita®&l.'V® *®'' The successful candidal© will ba a - 
Spedaiiits. and local ad- _hSM, 714-636-8991. self-dfrected Individual wllh a ■‘can-do* 

floral attitude, You'must be comfortable- 

aSbf^ ^ meeting and communication with local 

hSS: «»"«<■ Ml buBlnssB ownere end manamrB. You will 

. ture, agricuiiurai-educa-- FOOD SERVICE _ be resp^stbfe for representing all , ' 

tion, animal science, or Th* Filer School Olelrlel 'dealership services In gaining addition^ 
"®*®T tia'd. For . announces a luii-ume ve- commercial market penetration 

SiSS'.TcS.".^^ 

nouneement call the Unl. school ysiar. Experience R>®riical Insurance 

-varef^oMdtho.'TwIfr • desired.- Ctoilng date~for~ -®riO-401K. — • • 

Falls Research and Ex- thia pcelilon will be Au- S«nd resume to . 

‘•"•Ion Cenler Olfloa. 9«»t 9. 1999 at the end of Julee Hartson Ford, P.O. Box 1299 
2iIlut,''a’’R°c;SSSli>: ldaho,83301.1299 

U'" HARRISON 


DRUG FREE WORKPLACE 

CON fiUllOS 

AU. NEW 1999 
X CHEVROIETMAIIBU \ 

RefMsrfiWIi ' ^ ^ 

/ Carnival Cruise For Twel jOjuiLri^ 

# NopmhtMn*e»MiiV.S4BiMr*loceittto. 

* ■ M Month Lmm, Pk* Tu. TIM Fee snd Ostisr Ooe Fee of tea. OAC. Ad sipiras t/vn m 

\ W«'ll MaaiMB VoMf MIMC *»aym«n*l / 


20e*738*3Q6o. Closing- office hours. .To apply 
date d/satOO. The Univer- contact Sandra Roberta, 

sityof ldohals«nAArEO Flier School Olstrict. TOO 
omptoyef and educational B Stnens Ave. FilarTlO 
■nsdtom. B332eitr 328-5981. ' 


““ 324-3900 

aSL= ij^JEROME ssss; 

JUST A SHOUT omve from anywhbrb in the maoic valleyi 


E-4 Thnw|N*M, Twta Falli, Idaho Sunday; Aufut 1, 1999 


,»• woflOB. Sunriao Cara & Rahab for 


RN. $22,524 per hour 
LPN. S1S-ST6 por hour, 
CNA’b S 8-S0 por hour. 
.. ^pDClOl program avail. 
Contact Terry Miller at 
Gooding Rehab artd liv- 
ing Center. 334-560t. 


Twin Fhlla aooka 
ejrper/aneetf CN4'« & 

' M'a. SC&Rotrors 
-excellent benetii piig.' ' 
PTO and on site Ooycaro, 
Sniory DOE. Hire on 
bonus, shin dllforonllal, 
rbimbursomont (or 
oaucauon. EOE ' 


MISCEUANEQUS POUCE OFFICER 

$$SEARN WHIL£$$$ City of T«vm Foils it sc- 


uentr'At roimDurBomom lor 

. . oaucauon. EOE 

HN Immgdlaio oporiing. » intersstad apply In 
® parsonahMOFIIarAva. 
^ W.. Twin Falls. Idaho, 

rionco required. Must Itve nnnn 

wtihln aO mlnutOB orsr ^ >v-roo-»o.. .. 

Benedicts. Coll covoroge MEDICAL 

required. Send resume or Ttlsmsiry Technician 


YOU LEARN 

Free Education and 

Training 

(Ages 1810 24) 

Call Now 
t-800-043-5627 
• (208)733.2341 


cepting applications lor 
Reserve Police Officer. 
Information* including pb 


RETAIL STORE 
MANA(» 


description, quoiffleauorts, TWIN PAT t C m 
tesUng dotes and proce- * I St. ILF 

duras - is available from r-n .i., _ - 

- Linda Reid aithe.RoiRse 
..Service Center located m !T?, 
the Twin PaOs Police Oe- 
.portrT>ent.3563rdAvBauB 

Eott.TwinFalls.Thlsisa • ’^•“•■‘uiOuuuiaiU^ 


apply at SI. Bonodlets Wo currbnily hovo 2 PT ^B-T37.4C80B 

Family Modlcol^Conior. I Tolomotry foch, posilions 


hiring 3 experienced soles hO"-pa)(lng poslllon. For 
- people wntimannoemonl' - -(urt her i nquirYrphone- 
poionllol. RM ore wolco- 738-2223. Oosina data It 
mo. Call Racheal (or on AugusitS. 1999. 


TWIN FALLS, ID | WESTLAND 

ComnrNet CaUuiar sam- - - ‘ 
img me pace lor Jaaper- ' ' 

ahp m w im l airr salaam- j ' ,glICg» 

muruuBliuia urttn attnota-' | sMMmI 

'®*’®*®***®®oaBBtnflrt^ 'i — , _ - _ _ - ~ . . 

cuaionfar aerviaB. Our I Wt jpBI •> Wt S«1 lOB 2l ttt 81 K^C 


a rewarding appanunt^ 


ID 83338. Pre-omplovmort thotolomolrvcoLrsolsrn. ^ 


ID 63338. Pre-omploytnont the tolomolry course Is re- 
physical arid drunseroon- quirod ond tolomolry ox- 
Ing required. EOE pononco Is profonod.Co- 


■mploymant Retain your rani 


Ing required. E( 
MEDICAL 


pononco Is profonod.Co- 
mpolillve solary and ox- 
cotlont bononts 


RN or LPN Doalilon nvfiH Vj ^ iTTi. • . All positions ovnil. various I Boflf 


ModIcarConlor numofi 
Resources 
P.O. Box 409 


BW .T,..lnF.ri..lDEOE T.,. F.il.,' iS'e^'S.O.m " 


Thii («y Warn mamber svSl 

day-t»<lay auaitieas ab- 
tlvltlM of a campany- 


Wo curronlly have a FT. 
Clinical Monogor poslllon 
available in our Homo 
Heoltn ond Hospico 
doportmont. RN coquirod. 
BNS ond 2 yoors Homo 
Hoollh experience Is 
prolorrod. 

Competiiivo salary ond 


Resources 
P.O. Box 409. 

Twin Falls. 10 83303-0409 
(208)737-2843 ' 

FAX (208) 737-2741 • 

EOE 

Dnjg Froe Workplace 
MEDICAL 

RN's and LPN'a . Btidgo- 
View Ealotos Is socking 
experienced nurses lor 


(208)737-2843 
FAX (208) 737-2741 
EOE 

Drug Froe Workplace 


• jSunptHittugciitntnLsanTT cf nirfiiT P 

• scccisTt'ACTten^Q^tiaRS 

• &ii^[: 3 ^i^iiTi:{iicle 5 liESlttT. ( 1 ^^ 

'ir^jrtaifatcE ant-4Q'IC 

^ 9 $ 4 fegagKBggj. 2 Jay 4 e j cr *p«r^» 


MISCELLANEOUS 
Are you looking lor o chol- 
longing |pb with a compo- 


prolessiofial or public re- irol. cash mana g amerB [ 

IsUoris ogancy 10 bandia andarammaraatweeaia isM£B 
, regional pubitc ralailofis support. TneQualRmS ItnmBflnoTOSte-ta 


■ sun* ta.P.O-Bcx 1296. (hrtx^hOctW/ 

TwmFMh.iaM«j 83301 parsonon|obsaai 

■ seebon of & Wasi 

SKRETARY & 3600 in TF or i 

FiAttme passion, immetf- stnw to (206) 3G 

oaopaning HomeHeaOi WagsaStl-StSps 


MEDICAL onvironmont? Wo are cur- 

THERAPY ■ tonUy Interviewing enthu- 

siastic applicants (or tho 
SunDonco RohablNIatlon following positions: Visual 


longing job with a compo- ehorts tor o national wire-. candiflaiawllitieiMwr -wrs-r MtlmT ' 

ny that-hos a grool work less telecommunlestitms least one year pfsetall mrmtunai. aosUoRcas It - 

onvironmont? Wo ore cur- company. Professional sales ai^erransa ■rim 9taea«nrn &eMtorc 1 

ronUy Interviewing onthu- will develop and Impio- s o m« suparwxap. wrpnfcra cOTpoorr* S I 

slasilc applicants lor tho mtnt local/regional com- r y /niariag a n ai -f aarMBu,' «r Mbt t 


I - FVOUARE 
j REACMCTHBAa 
YOU ARC URHAPpr. 
j YOU ARE BTMBIOUr 
OFtRORK-aBYaU 


Corporoilon. 0 notional orrdS.TAR.T. 


■unity relations pro* p r af a ri efl. Snongais- . 


provider of suboMie and Job duties include, but not I product roll-outs, work isaMenilal. Campsarn- ' 

long term care sorvlcos .llrhllod to receiving, pro- vdihcsrporaia public rals- ara^ « tiqi% agoua. 

h as t he followlno op en- cessing 8 placement of tiorii_a^ rt aUonal aoen- Feur-vaar iltijrjaeLiis.R J 

‘Hh'pTnTaiiltd:- ■ -merchandise. This Is a ~fey. sn dpei TuunuUi wrne* ~p&.~ ~ ■ • ■ ■ - — -a 

pari-llme position that dia relations activities. ! 

Phtfolr^al Thar-aiM/ may Hex In hours bosod , Applicants should have ThlsitaTarespponimlirso ' 
inerapy on truck aenoaules and throe to five years of join a pregrenw*. taao- 


•vBhfeiTq camPQnrrs S of ■OWE. 

JUSrtMOfEA'JQB* 

dC' i tt i — a ca»n$30K 


' sississiiss 

’ -"'>»«■—’. *»”« SSiliSiSrcKS! 


and Occupational 


store needs. Wo offer etro^ public reiolions ex- 
compellllvo wages, a gen* perlerree end be ptef icl enl 

erous employee discount in Word. Excel and the 
ondadvoncomont Iniemet. Portfolio wlU be 


strorrg public relUions ex* , Itme^yaargan luaiu nira 
perlerree end be pte ficl enl offats OiaUeRge. a 
In Word. Excel and the eemp e l hive cstrtpensa* ' 


Occupational 

Therapy 

McCoiT 


Mil'll^* *S«itaS I ‘h H® “* (0281297-3OM. 


opportunities. 

Piooso oppiy.ln person lo: 
The Mirchs' 
1379 Polellne Rd. East 
Twin Falls, ID 83301 
Equil Opportunity 
Employer 


'Oreom Team* and enjoy"! Theropy Tech nooded for ' ^0“PP>iw*l'oriefor opani" 
Iho personal satisfaction tho children's program at "®vrs a week) . 


Send a resume, tvferene* for prsfessianal Oexalab- ftldia 

et and salary history lo: ment. In afldDcet). sur rani a 

Box 97155, %??>e Times- employoasersoyaxrrMqua ; Sratottg 
Nows. P.O. BcdiS 4B. Twin ca n ipa ryg moap i i ama! ' »giam 
Foils, Idaho 633{»*0548A toners see mw e r k attfcP ’ enssi 

RFCFPnoutxrr sauitaraion ForxrrmwdF- Sa«i. 

RECOTIONtST ate and corjftoontlal cm- A**..* 

«»=.i 

10amlo6pm, FrI. SaL 8 vour resume or lenar tf ■ 

- Bun.- Contact VickIJen- Imiratlo ;SMJES 


RsBim IFuii: I pfyaf 1528 «g«rt Axe 

JlZZ I •«»t»heMltl«oni g«l«c^ 734 -« 376 . 


|Exp»l.ncnfHVACa»v«a 

I tscfinictan needad. Pn 
rsaa SAStS par hr. ooe OtafN A COIMTEn? 
Haafm i ra u ranea.40lK. PUTfTTOWORK 
padveaflcn. H wee ap* S25^7Stv. PanfflMeo 


amt I ospact the same 
8enr at* people ms wotii 
■Stros tryoutaMSMaa 
- quSIRcsseRS. r would 


is unique to aondng devolopmoninlly^sabled Duly Aldo ot Filer Ele* REGIONAL PROORiUI 
sra In ihe rehab and contor. 56. 75/hour plus mohUi'y School. Respon- SPEOAUST - 

-term care setting, benoMls. No experionco ^WHIIos Incline supervis* Tho Soum Central OWrict 


long-term care selling, bonoMis. No experionco ^CiJ'lllos Include sup^s- 

Compellllvo salary and nocossary, Apply el 158 Ing iho lunchroom, play* 

benefit podtago. Contact Blake Stroot N..' Twin flfound rocessos, and 

. Leslie Hass RN..DNS ou _ Falls. No phono calls dutiM ns ossJgnod, 

- -730-3833 or-ap^y In per- --pleaso. - - . - .Tno position will remain 

son ai 1828 BrIdgoViow - open until filled. Please 

Blvd.', Twin Falls, ID. EOE MISCELLANEOUS apply lo Sandra Roberts, 


QA^tST - 6 < 5 ah*lja iBhg l. 

Central Olstria Twin Fans. IDessOl 

faaith bopartment is re* Ann; Hiring Maraoes 

rutting lor the position of .. . _ 

»iUd Com Unk coordna- CemmNs Cellular Me. a 


; S_AinnfcP»tiLTwfm 


SALES REPRESENTATIVE 


s ys-Ma .iMpiain-ti»» {^(ato pnxeswr is feoJong for an aga iBssK *. 
Oaii n ta tttr company 

B—tg of fr y o u. Call j bbp indhridual for our sales departmott. Position 
•®*"*»«73»57WtefaB I . ■ . _ , , ^ _ 

• p ^ x - i iii— II Indudes pricing, imentoty control, office control 


_ Falla. .No phono.calls other dutiM ns ossJgnod, -Child Cm Unk»oSi^- Oominhi«c*aularMt.<i 

-•pieose. • . L.Tho posii on wm remoln ror. ChnaCaro Urik Is'lhe • AA^O C mpto y r.- 

■■ open until llllod, Piooso child care Rasoorces and 

MISCELLANEOUS _ Reform! Affency for South SAlfS 

1 7 Immodlolo openings Filer School Dtsirici. 700 Contisl Idaho I hit v n ie l iej ** **»»■— 

avail, for plaeomoni. Ap- , ® Slovens Avo. Flier. ID - 

_... i_ !•!: ' mn^R nr r9nai-t9a.Kaai _. . _ . 


RNAPN, CNA for psychlai- | p|v In oeraon nt Ininr. ' 83328 or (208)328-5981 

moFftioln SialflntTHo^ ' "" ! 

^\^IJonsen 01 734* sources. 415 Addison MISCELLANEOUS 
6848 bofwoonanm 85pm. Avo,, Sullq 3, TF, ID. Ouesilons... 


LEASING 


background in early ehild- lassionaJ image. Iw aaR- 
hood edueaiion. Appil- motwaiing, aaiatt tnaai - 
cants must possess ax* deafliiries. arts n oewad 


- The quellfied-appileant-for thia-poaltion- 
wlll possess Ihe following qualities: 

• Strong communication skills 

• Rnaneiai backgrounc 

- :=:»:Computer 8 kilis=yT-:-*- — — 

• Highly motivated 

• Self starter 

> Able to prioritize 
. • Team oriented 

Previous leasing experience preferred 
but not required. 

INCOME POTENTIAL S40.0(»}-h. 
Benerits include: 

• PAID VACATION 

• PROFIT SHARING 

• MAJOR MEDICAL 

Send resume to 

" Jules Harrison Ford, P.O. Box 1299. 
Twin Falls. Idaho 83301*129^ 


'N. oy? Want to got Into cellent written and oral gaaitina e o m pe mw af>- 

\ Shape? Want to loom eommunleallen akilli, vlronmem. fao*ap^iaoa 

Strong organlzailonBl pretamationi, ana «taa 
skills? Need mone y to pay gklil xnnq tt whBWyrwri. . pw»m ili T)iniiiim ■ nil 
I • “lore^lOflOTIf you on- valop and pratoffl educa- IdOnvofikewnaaarsiTBl** 
awrod yos lo any of tho tienal prsarams for par- ableirarwportatwn, TCI 

k above. Iho Idaho Army ents and child care MadiaSanwsenSauai 

Noilonoi Guard moy, bo. _Oppaauaay*£inpiSMix-.; 

abriTIdlioip. ijoil sFC OrugtaBtTaqunaasntral 


a«* tnUiTfnsBrognun j] 


and uorking with brokm. Abo dir ect «»i»« to 
the inAsthal re^ labd. food scrvlec. 

gwenmicRt and esepdet liiaduraT'Tmfnc Btdis 
and mnoui other sales duties wll} be InvoKied. 

btteresud appficants should submit resumes with 

salary requremeni to the Personnel office. 

'Moffic Valley Toads, hie - . 
T.O. -Bax 475 

,dB 7 !PSt^dafiaM 33 SQ.. _ 

An Equal ^fMwiirv Cmpfeun' 


liens for an Amorlderpi 
I Promlae Fellow position.' 
I Prelerabaeholorsdegroo 
8 Dxperionco wbrking wlih 


RESTAOnANT~^ — T BJBS-TRtoodfxflr 

Intorettad In RiBklng SBO* MahoRaHa.XDCMin 

SlOO/day In Ups? Looking • ’ 

for brlgm. eriergotic poo- ... 

ploTotsorver.hMtlhone- yw» teo to»a.ty»new 

sa 8 cook poshionB. Wag- oarow w/unumoBa Mfaaw - 


rt‘hS-ai.‘'S'Mr.”: .^Ksesiiisfr k«‘..£sse 

ssss'/Mm 'S-SH'S? '•y.'pF'iSrnSSSSs. 

sffcsss,”/ ■ Ki'sr^’^S' 

souih comral Idaho real- RESTAURANT working esRdnsms 8 ^ 

dent (or ai Toast ono year, Hiring delivery drivers.- greasiwe inearrw appsrtu- 
C^ShOron While 01734- make up to $9.00/hr. Day nfty.WaaroutdWaaosalk 
5900 ext 203. . 8 night shitts av^. Apply to you. Apply mpetSDii 

uitLZiw In person at: ask for John Doxvflie: 

Poshio^nsort Jeroma Pina Hut CihrUJonten MapAa 

1 8 wosicoasts. 

1 -A/Mut 7 ar« 7 xv ■ 









POBUC SERVICE JEROME (5) 

MESSAGE 1 . 1 . 

Podwoi ompio/mom Infer- A A A AAA 

matfon is Itoo. Homom- ^ ^ ^ ^ “ 

bof. no one can promise _ 

y<waf«tefaiiob.Fof(foo THE TIMES*NEWS 


Tkn*»M*wt. Ttrin Falls. Idaho E-fi 


Youf Local Floa) 


information oboul loOornl 

)obs. can.Coroof Amofica i 
' Connection. 912.757-3000 I 


IS CURRENTLY' 

LOOKING for' 

INDEPENDENT JR .wucKtNu^Mi 

EASY^^^^I’acaLENT I avaiwbTIinth I '^s“ap“r‘ 

. PAY! AssomWo l?wdoct3 v CARRIERS FOR 

At Homo. Call Ton Free t- JEROME jAREA. THE RLER AREA. 

-60(W7.S56e.-e«r3t43- Walking Rout»s~ 

EmofQoncy Modical lOO-COQBlk sihAva lv 

:00-500Blk.&hAvoW HQVT^.552 

SO(y600eikrN'BlrOrSr. ^00-»O00e«f.-6frrSfrW 

Proor^cwnfnoni is soo-TOO BIk. Lmcoln Avo 700-800 BIk. 6th St. W. 


THETIMES-NEWS U 
IS CURRENTLY Home imprcniemc*a& 


JEROME. 2 bdrm 1 aaCt. TWUI FAXiS C-oa« 3 
Wbami no pefa. SSSO. a»m., 2 sen 2 -ar sa 
«^oep Caa 32a- ra^e. fen c e r rare 
■ ATW.loawe message • t-notins pcft.-S755 • 

.taanMc . ®*P 5Wo» 

^ •*0..T34'i0MLim*r£str. 


INDEPENDENT 

NEWSPAPER 


^ Debt ConscAdahon 
•a 123% EquCyLMi - 
-» Mobde Homes OK 
-* QucfcApteoKaia 


NEWSPAPER -»Ooe*Afla^« 
CARRIERS FOR 736-0033 or 000-7<2-6AS« 
THE R|^R AREA._ 

Walking Routes " a m 

Available M \ _ 30 4 I 


f 604 

■ UMFURM5HED 
g APTSDUPtEXES 

IM Tim« Homo Buyarx 
PlL^JUl{ Ovan yeur Tst 
*cn» «w line cr 0 eewn 
..sv* mcrtJWy BOymentsI 

Cel' 'Atsawre Hemas Iter 
bnaia. 7»sne 


I *♦♦***★****★ TWIN FALLS - Buss 
I TWIN FALLS Square Aparimonit 

/ Vorh Property ManaQomora. ' bCrm, 2 Min. nppimn 
SeveraJ units avail., mcluoing wasnor/Or) 
ranqinofmmsiuajonot.. Movoir* nilowgpco 
S250/mo 10 3 bCrtn Ckk Kartti for mom in/ 

flupio., S450.mo plus WINDERMERE 

aeverai n<e homes Property ManOQomon 

arouno SeSO/mo. - t, - -o-i. 

Cm 0aniciic^733 a869. 73A-4JJ4 

************ TWIN FALLS 1 bdrm I 


limllorl. For more 
informaiion contact 
Or. Cfaudoon Buotinor at 
CSI 733-9554 ext 2t55 


218- — 
Times News 
Carriers 


A A A A A A A 

THETIMES-NEWS 
CURRENTLY HAS- 
THE FOLLOWING 
INDEPENDENT 
NEWSPAPER 
.ROUTKINBUHL,. 

ROlfTE54S ‘ 
100-800 BIk. 13th Ave- 
nue North 

100-700 Blk. Ulh Ave- 
nue North 


734-034' 

|(ixc.u//™toiw.ra4 eoa-goam.iaanosi. S2J£iS5'St.S;iS|f iwni r*iis a=k= 

s.«5-S3oo«;»’~i 7 

- AAAA AA* 

w3^yyo:..Dc--y«i^ ,r.r?.™TT=; 

ir kkkh k'k 


■'S^'JS'oS' ISSrlSmStlSS T“'° 


WcrratjinLimodI somo * 

COOOOSC r CtS-m . vary * w'sm.nt yaro 5 storagu - . 
rw. Sjtt. esmt jcr.SSO- Somo wnn W.O hookups. 
One Lola. irefSW-Sddd' No pets Call734-«600 

— GREAT SAVINGS 

1 Btsm act Alt Uovejn news get _ 


ry ^ ^ 

I^RPRLV m 300-400 Bik. CarMta 

KIMBERLY (5) 500-500 Bik. GoiOen 

■dUJL kkkk<^ Spur Dr. 

K ^ ^ MMWW 800 Bik. Midway St. W. 

lOOS/*, Sfr/rupSf. 

THETIMES-NEWS 

IS CURRENTLY M you Uv tn thtM AfseJ. 
LOOKING FOR ™2XESi;£'^* 
inoefenoeot JR 

ROUTES Manager. 73341S3t 

AVAILABLE IN THE mmi 


733-6678 • SaSCacg »ceT»t« 

Y Secluded . . le ne^b -t -« TariN FA^^S 

oage.tkenMr. TWSt FALLS. 3 aartni 5 CMTr. all acB Sun Sack **♦***'•*•** 

bom.paso.ig s*n.l«m/iytm_b<r^siti. t.si£*,tr» a^c me sets’ ^ 3 Bd/m , 2 path, pnvniB 

o sprinkler, laundry tm ig i>ie« fakmn M«os, 2 car tfarago. so- 

lAjrffeAcmg. Saao-WX.arp 73*^014 fTjn s^a cunty gaiD, noar MVRMC' 

L peature. na ■ ^ 734-8926/ (80t)54t-379Y 


305 

CONTRACTS A 
MORTGAGES 


icon H^h Soiooi A ct/ : 


SHOSHOHEtWicvt-«- 


KlMBERLY-AfteArl 


SS CASH MOW n Close 10 school. SW5 
FarCorttaasSUorugn. 22142.*^ * 
MacSMounsrMiuSiSr • 

. 3a e-7M 8mm . twwfaua 

CASH lor Deads of Tcwl ^ F 


r FALLS • NEW • 3 

-C.WOS«cunfv Mnn- 2 torn, garage, pa- 

JIT T f f -fpnj -b^saif'iriaan oven, refng, I 
acAau aa*-iB5a ^ q hook-ups. AC. 
KKBSatasTteaiaa’ 4111 4 Mormngside. Jose/- 
uwee a fl unai oe ^ 731-0076. Don 733- I 
CoeuAnerOl 272? or 734-960S. S&SO . 


>. . mil leg ■~-T‘**r*rwl I • ' vr 

• ;|Op S R AL f* Oi «iM-r j3 -77» 1-**^*^- 


nueiionh ooo-eoo aik. Adams ADVERTISE 

100-700Blk.14thAve- - ''OUR 

mjBNM fSSSJSsf SERVICE SPECIALTY 

INTHISOIRECTOHV 

1300 Blk. Main Street strooi 

Placed under (fwruKrky of 


T WIN FALLS . ,1 bdrtn opL . 
Very eloan. ground floor, 
SSTOfmo.* dep. No pets. 
733*3669 bolero 6i00 
p.m. leave message.M 

TimN FAU&l bom. apt. 
‘~aown&Mn:'n6arc oppis'. ' 
Iwn. S300/mo.*dsp. 735- 
6802.731-1219. Aft^me, 


1300 Blk. Main Street sirooi ^ 

ItyM Oveln Buhtaan tf you five In tfilt area S 


STStwSl'So’oS' a^-A nei ^S^- l ;£SSS^^S5i^. ^S^SOUARE ««■ 731.1219. Anybrne. 
S^iSn^SS^TS' C« Mark. 733-040?^ : «=«»teyOAC Afl TWIN FALLS. 1 bdmi. No 

w»Agii.rue» t-eS8«^oe7D CM 736*1829 ■ , QAICWOCiO HOMES ‘"Ouding w®, Smoking/Pet*. Senior 

DRACO nun FALLS. Fpr rerc. 1 733-7755 ' W- gSO^O- 732-ei-«4. 

INVESTMENT CORP. TYW FALLS - 2 borm. 1 cieatr. imfumisned. 3 ']Z±TT^. 4996evea TWIN FALLS. 2 bdrm 

Mortgoges? Cordreets? 5U*'’- *73 3rd Ave. N. btfcnti SdPi. S i wi > -t flia ; ren t trap’ apts. available SubsMli- 

SSSoltrua7 «he. rebig. no- CWPOL Ctfalws;mi.732-9DQ2 , ^ hearte. 6S3 *c TWO* FALLS - 2 Odrm. 1 ed. Pick uD apolic^ns 


PfaoM eentact DIatrtet 
Manager 
7330937, ML 340 


*★★★★★ 

The Times-Nows Is 

r'curroRtly look^ for 

Independent Walking 
Route Cerrier* In the 
BURLEY urea. 


A A 

FAX 

YOUR 

AD 


301 

BUSINESS 

OPPORTUNITIES 


"T :.Lr/Xi~}-Z * a_reettng CUd'Roiile' 

-- Must sell by 8/19. Work 4 . 

TIMES CLASSIFIED hrsAvk, Earn 32K > yr. 


You wart lo sea? $450'-»tiep. r 

Wewarttobuy. 8909or733f 

We'^^tliSXe, t 

H. Sd^S^^iort Cel734-4l2a j 

R«dwrd B. Stivers, V.P. TWIN FALLS • Vanaoe 3 I 
T.W Strvers. Sac /Treas Ddun. den. 2 baui. bee- I 

„ SB14 DIRECT ?S SS,^ig“ E 

Reootving Payments? Wo - ser«4. p 

Purchase MoRgages. TIVM PALIS 
Contraea. Trus OeM 4 2 beOrpom 

Noios. Immediale Ouctesi Im n i p dM ie D 
No Feesi TOP DOLLAR Amenaesand] 

_ PAID! Sofl Dnci lo the . .: CafKaiMe 

. .Wo*s Largest Fundfig - - -WINDER 


' OMCWOCX>HOME5 ‘"Outfng w®. Smoking/Pets. Senior 

I ■ XP.7755 :'Tk^”50»..7«.4W. 

■TB»m.-4i~ 4996evea. TWIN FALLS. 2 bdrm, 

; . opu. available. SubsldU- 

7*®* FAUS • 2 edrm. 1 ed. Pick up applicallons 

”. ^ i * Stove, refng. DW. 4 oi t354 Si VYwhlnglon 

I iSrr^!XlrV2r2727 734-6095.M Si Cofl 20B.734-8997.B 

Kmewry P'2. Twnr FaiJs- 

®®»73»22Z* I xr/-kTar n v- a.T'i- * ^ -I 


rww FAILS 1 rn csS- 
lage. S24S.-ms UUIa • 
a*a*«Oad 73»«sa 


tmmedme Occacency* 


208-677-4543 
(BURLEY) - 


Ovortand Avo-Patk View _ 

— Ave. TWIN FALLS (7) 

2Stfi Drh/o - West 27th k i i i i 


I'k'kirkrkirk 


IF you live in the 
~B0Ri£9 area 8 a 


Buffo/ Timos-News 
office at 677-4042 or 
stop by the Burley 


ACCOUNTANTS! Start 
- your own praaice. Take 
charge of ^ future) Spe- 
ciaiuo Ifi small business 
, 4 U»K. PADGETT. 
Americas *1 franchiso 
provides syuoms. training 
& marketing support. 
i-ee6-s63-i(>40 


HERIOIAN PARTNERS 
1-600^1-9301 
www.mendwarbiers com 


WINDERMERE ~ 

Proper^ Uanagemert 

734-4334 


I — n ^ NOW RENTING 

Glenea^es Apartments 

^*M4PaiSA^rtt»^i® Twin Falls Premier Housing Community 

css- Sprtifij My For EUetfy. Hanlleap or Dlsablnt 

S5 ' BFullyAnilnxdlQtdxrs ISKURd Bulkiinf 

ste I |SL£S!S!^2^S^ ■C^MitoCondUo^ ■LastagOffice* 

I ■CenolLanbyFjdlida ■FuDSsGangeRxRcnt 

— *tR 44S -tr^3eonn:- «Cflmmunily/PKvAte8 ■IndrldBJlPaitB-- -yC> 

TT' ■ »Wa>ks;T>igHooli-L'p 

Sik ' ewwjr2SS?J!^^> •'“"IP'^inrraaaAnilMurrAtAftlcrYouV.TDfcAWrToAfloni: 

' SAfia'"®- »SO 0»n Call Bw rww litfoittiMkmjrvlaipUcaaor call 71MMH, 

AentOneTSkSMT toitwhtaittglmpMitU.TPW l-«OOStS-llil»E»t.29H 


. jmEJlMESJiEWS_ n7;..iK.H ...*7 TTp7 

CURRENTLY HAS »vwy»»har«i73>oni. - 
THE FOLLOWING EAnNS1200N£l(TWE£X 

INP.EEENP8NT__ . And^Ntw CompoWl— 

NEWSPAPER ^of Clouuis. Can Tou Froo 
ROUTES ON THE i-88a-S46-6e73« 


B bdrm. 2bs7i. Biai rm. Ig 

734080676^ 

I EdueatJon- TWIN FALLS. 2 bOtm l 

I bath house. W/D. save. 

— relrig. S47S'mo- S2S0 

401 Oap 230UMS17342S64 

SCHOOLS/ 7wiif caii«. r 

— IH5TRUCI10«4 

Spwks.S7D0 733-13SB 

TWWFAUSSoe.^^ 


EAST SIDE OF 
^■7WlN.EALLS_ 


adllneAug.201999. PQVTE m 

i . . 1800-1900Blk.4lhAvo- 

★★★★★★ li’iSSJS.^ 

5 ' 
KVSTSELU^Ljcj. 


'medical BILUNG ™*laSJSSSmS' SS2«sSm^ 

Unlltnitod income potemiaL.. **~ _2t»-73fra3a« 

Frw*in?o"s’^^ROM? mi TM ’ bdrm. 

vftst eano^.nrxK c;*.Rn^ 736-4972 Or 734-1697 S32S/rno -tfep Poti OK i 

PlMMCaa2(»S36-6618 ' 


Fawnbrook 

APAKT>ll:.'v I .% 

MnrBtmURgAffm^aMeams^ 

Contort S Comcnnence All in One! 

• Sfucjouv -thuiipiB -f-i/li» fcaiicprrilCtKftemi 

• Laundrwt - PrjAjnr RaJidvOtck-r - i PTjTOoijrvdii 

- C owr tfd Paflmt « Pr ew w c i r j /fli sem-jg-i* 

- -• i4«m Ouacarmprt *<Ui i ii «iu a i« r — 

_^_Ngg_Og ^ng .Offimmii V>B«vf»4lDJUIto<i»jni;r^ 


Free info 4 CO-ROM. In- 
I vest 54995-8995. Financ- 
ing avail Island Automat- 
ed Medical Services. Inc. 
(600)322-1139 0x1. 1216M 


a .TWINFAUS I ^ 

rden Apartments 

■ 2 - 3 -- 4 -BedroomUnifs~' 

Close foSchoot A Shopping •/. 

— : AlLWHStWCl UDfc; — ^ ^ 

B4mos«eteanonow;DBnwa!hoa»4crowcvo»4A» 4f^ 
Ceritinonino.PiuiMaf7HovoW<»no</OfywHt)Oki«» 
OYc»ent4<ea-M*oflr'glloem.(J*croal«nfloom • 

CAttTODAr73«-7T051.^ 


! Hourv:S30-&J0aaar»Sjg.SSaa. !0-2 • 


THE TIMES-NEWS ' 1200-1400 


ROUTE 7S4 
BOO Blk. Elm St. N. 
700-800 Blk. Walnut 
Street North 


mg route. StOOO/wk. po- 
tontioi. 54995 invostmorn. 

FREE INFO. 
800-57S272S, 24 hrs 


601 

FURKISHEO 

HOUSES 


CURRENTLY HAS Avenue 

THE FOLLOWING 
INDEPENDENT ROUTE 788 

~NEWS¥XPEB^ 7300-TS^BtJ^iw 
ROUTES ON THE ^ S 

WESTSIDE.OF onrrrtr^c 


Wilmoro I Non accooni. very prol- 1 FILER 3 b 


I I lloble, includes bucks, I 
I seOor Iniining 4 finonemg. I 
I (^e. Bakery 4 CaUrtno l I 
I Unique jetting.-ofofT 


ROUTE 823 
100^00 B». 7th Ave. E. 
t0O300BIk.8thAvo.E. 
100-200 Blk. 9(h Ave. E 
700-900 Blk. Blue Lakes 
TDO-fOOCBA-Shoshono 
, Sfreot East 


— rotwswTMCBhiaih — 
View Drive 

2000-2100 Blk. White 
Cloud 

900 Blk. Wood River 
Drive 

ROUTE 713 
1200-1500 Blk. 

• ■ Evergreen Drive 


lacdity, excellent location. 
595. 000 w/ierms, very 

proRtable. 

Cosh Business 
(2) Coin Laundry/Dry 
cleaners. Well eslab- 
lishod. Terms. 

First cues Dining 
This rostaurani is firsi 
Class. Excellent repute* 


500 BO(. Part! Meadows 1200-1400 Blk. Holly Dr \\t«>n\Gmauormsi 
CMo 1100-1600Blk. Juniper FuflSwvles 

tOOO-IIOOBIk. SlroetNorth 1 Qroeery Busins 

Pa/kMoadowDriva 1100-1200 Blk. Locust | £<eeDani locaiion. i 

400-500 Blk. Parkway Siroot North customer base. ( 

Circle I tarmsi Otmernintfig 

t000-t100Blk.TwinPa/k ROUTE me I , 

roo3xm.mkSi. II.. R*™-*?**!- 

100-200 Blk. Taylor SI. 


garage. Private new bndc 
rancti on 2 Con- 

TWIN FALLS. Cempiec^ 
furnished, brand new. 3 

ruee N.E. loeaMn F etMod 
yard. Sioooper mon. M. 
oil uuirbei. basic phorM. 
coble 4 lawn care. Short 
term OK. Calf Kent at 
733-5336 or 73L6KM. 

6^ I 

UNFURNtSKED 

MOUSES 

BUHL. Small Country 1 
.bdrm. hoiae wAcA. O^ 
7334M74. eve 543A63S. 


B^INESS & SERVICE 


Cae 733-0931 exX 1 Awa 


o nrscnifer representative.^ 


IOOOOOeaLBera/tAve.W 
300BIk.QMrandefSLN. 
OOOBtKWashingionStN 
UXkOOOBIk. Wiseman 
Avenue 


iwrrwam. layiarpi. pia,o ,nop_ jyj.goo 
I wrtarmi Teaming. 

ROU r or 829 II Southwestern Olrtbio 

100-400 Blk. Jottarson I Wan ottabiiahed!t^»r 


Unique opponimty. Com- FILER • 1 bdrm 1 bath. 


ROUTE 839 

R OUTESat EOO Blk. eora hAv a 

Sdo sat eoSiSL 200^00 Bk. Fillmore St 

lOO-SOOBA. Filer Ave.W. 300-400 Blk. Taylor St 


BS2UIE9B 500-600 Blk. Monroe St 
•waac ewrar^a N. S0O-6O0B!k. Quincy St 
lOaUDO BOr OrOteia Avn. I. 4 • |l 


fenced, w/d hook-up. 
5325 mo. * ubUios Cal 
Shorry af 326-4020. »8. 
FILER Entro niea. 3 bdrm.. 
2 bath, dbi wide, good ar- 
ea. S4SO/mo. No pete, 
refs. 328-SSS7. 


BUSINESS 

SERVICES 

TWiM gaite 

FLAN ROOM 
-lobs 10 bd tar Gerwcals. 
'SrO xjaiUMJu itA Sidlpk- 


Start buidng. ecwua ie 
work. MexAjtaamMar 
tobg Caf 734-6303 

DECKS 


f^iAuMUuf FloomgB 


HEATWG&AIR 

COMPmOMMG 


CONSTWOCnOW 


HOMEREPiURS 


UWDSCAPWG 


(tOOFan 4 COATINGS* 
-733-7221 or 32S-5B57 
Ce minaitei al. tasldomlal. 


737^000 

SHARPENING 

SERVICE 


OOOOOia 2 tafenuHbrtrt. 

-823 Oregon. avaH. gn. - 
fenoad, 5*50. 637-g»4. 

HAOERMAN - 2 renlal 
isiBakiN.Hagarmm.aak 
(So. 5225 Mo, 3 bWm. t 
bath. 6929 mo. Call for 
Wo 837-4957. 


Cempiata inorpaninf^ 

Can3d»4ataaiaawm. 

Mt Bracken St S 


TREE & SHRUB 
SERVICE 

*^irthg ftrfccaon* 


TREE SERVICES 


MONEYTOLOAH I HAOERHAN.NK 


loncad paalura avail. 
S67S mon.k 6500 d«p. 
Owner. (206| 362-8360. 
For Mtovikig. 637-630X 


nnirrr»*t OOCKlta 1004 . •mi, u wm. i 

oi«S*S!i^ *1 700-800 Blk. Academic . . . bath. 6525 mo. Call for 

. . 800 tUK. aiaao m n. Drive ' t mfo 837-4957 

700-800 Campus | MONEY TO LOAN HAOERMAN. Nlce4 

100-400 BOcRobblns Ave ' ' y*— — txbm.. 2 baffi log tmmo. 2 

• 700800 Ok. Sparks 200-300 Bk. MeoOows , <Aa\J^OVi^T^J^ mla.W-o(towii. tSasiea. 

Lane ( , Raal Eatata Loana. .loncad paalura avail. 

- R O UtE B T R - 300Btk.-MonroeClfr~ Purehaaoarreflniinoa ' S675.mon.* 6500 dep. 

800 BB(. Bracken St N. 300-800 Blk. Monroe-St Oi^approvatt Ow ner* 3«. m6 0. 

eOOBtc.EastwlndDr. 300 Blk. Monroe Way 731-5020 ForWwwing. 637-a30X 

. SOO8OO80c.FsOsAve.W. TOO-SOOBIk. Disney &. e***eeeeeeeeeeee HANSEH. 2 bifem. i bWk 
10P-200Blk.Unlver5lV. . .. lOWRATEB 2 cw gangs sow. Rata. 
BOOBMuWestMndDr.. -Avenue ■■ reasonable FEES required. »Xkrmo.*S20a 

4 Purchaae. Refinance PMaaecM206-<23-Sl77. 

8 you 8v9 on the West H you Uvs on the EAST ConaoUdatlon Loana . 

aHeoFTWbiFaOaBare aide of Twin FaOa A are a'otnnmn m irrmn.MCndn «>SROME • Cl ae n 2 bdnn. 
Intereeted In being e Mereeted In being en Bankruptcy. Foredooura Po**4>le 3rd. good loca* 

_ Mdependentnewepeper, Indepe n dent n ev iep e p er -♦- Mobile Home Lowia— bon. no smoking otpoaa. 

earriar_ carrMr-. « Vtaliourwebahe SSOO. fat and loal plus 

Pleeee contact OlaPtat Ptaeee contact Dlatrlet ®htip-./A*ww.trtttk>anxont ^Mhkig dap. Call 326- 
Men e ger Manegdr at 733-0831 TwInFalla aS3aftar6pm.M 

7330831.ea^ aatSSS Mortgao. Sourc :feBOME2bdnn.1ba«h. 

A A A A A A A moe location. ssTs/m* 

♦•4a444a«4a*e44ee $300 dw. 001324*5551. 


U you live on the West 
afoe ot TWtn FaOa 6 are 
Intareatedlnbelnga 


■ HANOYMAW 

>-x>AWpfKOFAfir>.»> 
- t M ndy awt Saniioaa.-— 
' HomeRepaacBacblcM. 

SSS^SSSi 

• 711 M6 ■ 

HANDYMAN 

SERVICES 


PA*mNG& 

PHYWALL 


aNJ8wi>644-ttt> 
PAMlMGft 
, JAMTOBm. 


. Stump grinder. Free 
saOmMaa. Caa CDS}73«■ 
_^«ar»»»£r^^ 

TRBE SERVICES 


7 34-ta i or 

^00771 locN can 
Tm MbaB 734*791 9 


coneeawaa on tfie fkec 
dpr that K lurw. OB The 
T u tie a W a w a la net re* 
aporafble Ibr wiwa of* 


TREE SERVICES 


Servlno Minl-CasalaS MV 
'Total Tree Cara 'Stump 
Removal • Total LandRBpi 
kig • FIrtwood aold by 
the cord aplirs 
deUverad • Free Estlmata 
43t-5391- 678-4182 eves 


K4K Tree Trimming 
4 Lawn care. Shrubbery 
and bush trimminij. 

Fer free Eatknoias 

Can 738-0583 

IBEE TRIMMING 

MASTER TREE 6 YARD 
CsaAiboik. Quality 
work, raosonobia prkta. 

22 yean ODvertonca. 
73A1328 er73IL74a9 or 
. 731*74ea> 

VACUUM SALES 
■ AND SERVICE — 

ELECTROLUX 
Vaaosn daanara, 
shenpooora, central vacs. 
Sales, oarvice and repidr. 
930DuBale- ■ 

Can 7336616 

WH»INQff»ARTY 
& BRIDESMAID 

^NEDomd^p • 

Rente a Saba Oreeeaet 

Big Oreaa 4 Shot Satal 
SHoaa Vaia. Bm & SlQf 
30% OtrOn bivttaflona. 
7336836-2108. Main 

; FAX 
YOUR 
AD 

TIMES CLASSIREO 
V DEPARTMENT 
208-734'5538 

208-677-4543 

~ (^UHLEV) 


£■6 Tlme»W«»«. Twin FilU, liUho • Sund«y. Aupiit 1, 1999 


TWIN FAU5 TWIN FALLS. 010 Para 

^1. Of Tovmhouso dlM Placa *102. 2 bdrm 
2 DMfooms. 2 bat^, 2t«ithwilhnllappllnnco3. 
W co ndrttofiof/Difthwaahof S550.00»<Joposil 
S^o w/riropLico orW/D 354 0rchalara *3. 2 bdmi 


TWIN FALLS. 010 Para* TWIN'FALLS. Rooms. TWIN FALLS twim eai i c o kh < 

dlM Placa *102. 2 bdrm. SOO/wook. micrownvo, Oownlown^Hco swica In bath ^ ’ HORSE - 5 yf old APHA BALER Intomailonol PTO. 

2tMlhw.U.nllappllnnco3. fo(ri[,. Ulilillos pd. Cablo KoyBankb^ "Ill cut and model 4*5.. oxc. ahapo. 

SSM.OO»doposil TV. nopob.1201 Kimbcf- 


*• Cable I Key Bank buijdlno. S ahaioul 


. Ffom $475 to S575/mon:ii 

plus doposJl 

OilT Kdfta Of Sieve ^ 

VyiNDERMERE 

Pfopofty Manaoomonl . 

734-4334.. 


1 bmh with laundry room,-. — 

S400.00»doposll. M 

776 N. WssMnaton *2 & I ..no, 
*4.2txlrms.l bam, NICE 1 ”°Hl 
unlit, noa/ CSI, $4SO«dcp ■ ._ 
oasOulney.fB. 2bd«m I FILER 2 tx 


■ ■ ' -03mnonfCSl.5430.dup.' bonl. rob. roq., no puis, 

•TWIN FALLS Cuio ouloi No polein iMoso uniislll 5325. $175 dop Wnioi. 

clean; I ^rn wi. MM BRAWLEY REALTY '"C 


201 Kimbcf. piiv.iio oHIcos plus break 

’35 0232.B roOrn avail. Some ulDiiios 

_ included. Priced a|.. 75 

3 l«.T a«|.li por monlh. Con- 

10MES A* Gem State 

Ronlly. 737-3039 

1 iMIh, ons TWIN FALLS Homa-stylad 


COMBINE PARTS; now & 

X over used Bin & Aunor unload- 
T. old Of ports lor 1 oca Combine. 


ALLQROyNpWORK_ 


734.5858 

Eves. & Wkndt. Oava 
324-4603 


oll'co unit. 2nd Ave. Imo- 
sion. oltslioot patking. 
Homo or oirieo? 733-7078. 


—TWIN FALLS Now eccopl- 324-4603 

tng oppllcailons for S. 

Meadow Apis,, 2 8 3 TWIN FALLS. Acroi 


homo. In qulol soiling, l/q 
dock, gas/oloclrlc honi, 
no IfQ pois. 5475 mo. . 
5475 dop. Rol, 734-2894 


bdrm, uniis avail., must CSI on Ridgeway. • 

incomo qualify, call 208- Nowty romodolod 2 bdrm, S*75 dop. Rol. 734-2894 

734.7327. Hooflno Im I.bamw/garago.SSOOmo ; 

paired. I.600-378«2ff47.' “ r 5500*de*-*-Call'Mnfk“ fl 607 

Equal Housing Opponunrty • 7330404, of 808-558-0670. | OFFICE & 

TWIN FALLS. 2 bdrm ’’‘'V'N FALLS; ABSUmo’ ^;;^ETA|L^PACE 
Froo cablo no ools pymis , move In now, II 

S350/mo . doD 734-04RO havon'i quallllod any- JEROME lOOO sq. II. oflieo 
.M "wnofo oiso.'coii us: Ouli-- “|ust off srLincoin.'l'al 
“TWIN PALLSrE bCrmr 'wood Homos 73317755:”' ~ class. 54 50;ino~324-2a3 4. 

T„m.HALLS.-C,..n. 

TWIN FALLS. 232 2nd Rulei. 2 bdrm. 1 bath opt, — 


mg, Irg ptolosslonnl olllc'es, 

: honi, Sl7Sfmo. 1 largo upstairs 
mo_ ♦ olfico, S400Ano. 3 looms 
•^“34 4 pnvnto both & kdehon, 

■■ , - SSOO/mo Avail n ovi. All- 
r uirmirer"AC{|. ronl'freei 
Call 734.9969 or eve- 
CE I "mgs 733'67$S. 


30 HORSESHOEING - 
Six years oxpor. 
Calt73S-a204,M 


HORSES • Golding, oxt/a ollor S pm, 467.25 22. 
629-5123. built, now w/ hydraulic 


1^000 cond. 53t-,vt64.B Custom Grain Combining. HAY: Horso hoy or loodor 
IRAJN AUGER 45 ft. G In. Cornblno. w/ or hoy. 1 si & 2nd culling - 

long, liko now, 51000. Call Foasonabla- -hoy.-3 stringrblock 

ollor 5 pm. 487-2522. or 43i. slacked. Sm. amts. OK. 

- — S3B80f 431-4097. 320-4270. 731-0741 ovos. 


“kSsIk 

nwgs 733 676S. Price: $15,050 I940MJ ' A'l'i’O "I *600. INTERNATIONAL '84 10- 733-8456,639-1309, 

I - ' I l-OOO-ass.jVifl «r Muei Mil. 20B.436 0774. whoolor w/ lag axlo. bulk 539-1391 

733-1623 unoeec o-- a -u. — tied, nugor unload- ' 

— COMMERCIAlr~ ' " — HORSES-Rcg-Afabi.- - nn-Si2 soo-TTtrrrTn — : — STACKING big bolee — 

- -RENTACr-- ' CATTLE- A-l sprlngor Staitlng al SeSDJrall en- , '[TtSIZSOO. 7337373. .HETHlEVINQ2A3widoor- 
bolf6ra.CaO51&90S-297O ourance & show. All JD. 2020 Tractor, gas, PS. big balos. Comp, covorod.’ 
• ^ * “"’'‘'t- 2 stage clutch. Itvo PTO, Unlimited 543-5388 

-iw A-rm-NnTH.-„ . 


built, now w/ hydraulic i HAHVESTINO STRAW, whoot 100 ton. 
hoses, drums, valvoe, on ..."^''■^eos-Small SoodS„ ..$1. balo/otlor..2 string 

•nj5orvoirrSiP.000r324: cui-wmdrowoi bntorrosS“4SlTor~ 

3995 aftof boop.dlol 1011 “vallablo. 503-635-3003. 

■ LESUER. JONES. INC. ~ 

NTEHNATIONAL '84 10- 733-8456,639-1309, ' WANTED; Wht 

wneolor w/ tag oxlo. bulk 639-1391 whole barloy. 


--Ave.-£a*t-(Stata-Aple.)' 'elrIg.-W/O hook— |j^OME,-Prolefcsionai.ol-- — ttUg - over 4500sQ.ft. 5 


TWIN FALLS. Commorctal j belter calves (or safe, 


*B-0. *B-3 end *23. 

S260*dOO. Lonnrfrv fnrill. ■ -- — . — _ , 

0«lh «,», »und,y ,o.m. f.S y;,?i S'"' E--™"" Ofir.. Sp.c. 734.«11. W,l.„» 

s,o(i.oo.aooo,ii. ™';)' 2 lotMomio 0.00,0 i,om 

^.“.'s's^ro'a;;- dE"o«E.4«.«.«..=. 

BRAWLEY REALTY ™.N FALLS. Col,,. Oo.o, .VZ y*K,”XX: 

■evoaI^o.™ 


HORSES. 3 yf,.QH geld- »oa:uu. t^ii ■ 

log, 3 Bars Depth Charge JOHN DEERE 7720 Com- 


lonco siorago, CATTLE Hoisioln dairy brooding, sioriod on blno l6‘hoador oxcol ^117 

herd. Ceu (2081 A8a.<K7n barrels. Yaartino OH flilv. f-fsaw eAA.ooa. LT.. - 


SWAYHlNG-Hay & lead' 
! crops. Baling 5 stacking. 
733-1963 or 733-S839.M 


734-5858 

Eves, ft Wkfids. Dave 

. , 324-4603 


~ Convonioni, orin^o park- 
ing, all ulilillos Included. 
Single OHIee ' 
Downtown Shoshone St. 


located: 254 41b Avo.w! bord-CaU (206) 866-9573 barrels. Yearling OH Ally. cond. 654-9391. ovos ■' * 

inqiilirrm Of (208) 860-0660. Joo Cody Loo SuOOf Bars ; _««»*«»<) M. 73 3-0931. 

734-4411. Willslno. ' rneoli — ! — 7 4 Completo English riding LATEX Culklng system, ^ ■ 

>»*•»******••** CORRAL -Ug site tor tom equip ft ciothos. 436-0732 easy applicnilon to seal ■ 705 

^ 9ralnJslns.-4»lU;ollec«- I IRRIOATJON 1- 

lEHOME I400aq.fi.cold !,%„,? HORSES- Foundnilan bred nhHIOf leave m80..-.Evof- > 

•lerage ipeeo. ’A mi.from Call 543-2466. QH boy more. 5 yr old on Howard. 455-0602. CLYDE'S PIPE repair 

fro^wa/' Semi-I^aingca- ntr efty sorrel filly, cow brod. well lOCKWonn uunn ,mf.m Wheel lines ovm In the 
pa I. nos, 324-2634. Custom Saddles. '’“^"lof.WboliKlSSa «J|I8 or clean up mo bone 

NBf-f AtfcS-fi0G4ifrAve- T ac k .Rayira 5300. Coll 42 3-6762.il .mlsc,-pafier(lefd-Teedyr -^0-OUUM^ci,-whool- 


WANTED; Wholo com ft 
whole barloy. Pox Food 
Mill, 3651 N 1400 E.Buhl, 
-ID.-543-ei3 1 01^4-8363— 
WE BUY WHEAT ft 
BARLEY. 

I>a00-S07-7155 

WE BUY 

USED SADDLES & EOUIP- 
MENT FOR CASHI 
Also, old silver bits ft spurs 
VICKER'S 
WESTERN'S STORE 
.. 733-7090 


I Ooug KOontz 326-5036 


:lng.S425.00*doposll. Oarasio w/oponor, Irg yrd. Quality Ihru-Qql. approx .qo uoft down-taus 
Ermwood Clrc^. 3 AC. OW, WD hookups'. 400aq,ft. 

n.-l bath with base- S537 ♦ dop, 737-3924, ■ • Cnil Slovo Hnllo^f1S m *< 

l. M75 W‘beposlt. ■ . == imo^"/ S7?0 SSp wi 

!U I 605 I WINDERMERE yoarioaso Ca»734-; 

m. 5450 00*doposn ■ ROOMS FOR RENT PfOPOrtyManagomoni . 

> 4th Ave. East. 1 7<ld^>VS4 twin falls For loos 

1, 1 bnih. S300.dop 7’ .. 3752 a 

ts In those unlisill Hdl^y M0I0I - p^|_(_g 1763 sq 'SO.SO/sq,'. 1 


donkeys. Adofoblo mini I 
Ubbl'OVS. ihoy'n pull your 

lion area and lots of sior- can each wah* Afi.ir t 

ssr7j,SMsrKS;i o,",iyo,MJdAi»„i 

S ,d.,d 543..„a . 

Imo A S750 dop. w/ 3-S E-MAIL your clossifiodod 
year loaso Can 734-7007 to us ei 

rariNFALLSF„l.«,.-2- -"»-l~FaFdFA»,.„l 
toiall spaces 2752 sq * ft «**«»YOUR CHOICE! 


I HORSES. (1) pan Poruvi- 


.allO-Ol-baflajinci^ wheel— |1 
linos ft main lines. Also ’ 
buys tordp aluminum, ^ 


S'S= 


potato DIOOEH. Lock- * 
O^’ott’ wood 8440. '92. 4 row, ALFALF 
643-4660. leave mesaago. — -comofpuii.- S8000. Call rhlxos,' 
OMLVI 676-3327 6r 431-3327. ■ (jail Bo 


706 

FARM SEED & 
FERTIUZER 


801- 

ANTIQUES a 
COLLECTIBLES I 


ANTIQUE Hooslor cup- 
board. SSOO/otlor. 
738-2646. 


space on Norm Fiiimoro [-tu/im cm 1 c •>nnn m 
TWIN FALLS wlih kileh- St, (near Costco), Soon to 
ons, S95 wkly. S225-$360 bo higher visibility loea- 


toiall spaces 2752 sq * ft «**«»YOUR CHOICE! ONLYI or ■ L.011 Bob Hamilton So 

1763 sq 'S0.50/aq.'» triple Feathortlio STL or Trails 20 ft Foaihorhio V-Noso PUMP. 2x2 portablo $300 234.3587 or 733-14 77, 

n_Q! jognita^aiQ 459M4a^ ; West 20 HSlock Italiof ' ??•?««' Oblo w/slldor. 375 Swether oaris. '63 nCinaMir fniione-p' 


ALFALFA SEED. Pasluro 738-2646. 
rhlxos,' odlsT Dbllvorod! Aoi-r.L.«... . - 
Coll Bob Hamilton Sood SHOW & SALEI 


PROFESSIONAL OFFICE 
SPACE FOR LEASE — 

4,0Q0Jsq..ft,^-_iytay-8€ -Subdivided — 

Reasonable Terms ~ 550 sq. ft. 

1st Month FREE 

Located at 493 Eastland Drive, twin Falls 

_ r’°f M°feJnfomiaaorLCall.734-5633or-736-7620 — 


ovorheod door, small or 733-1623 Teacup Ranch Producllon 

oilico Call206-423-S4li. ft Pertormance Horae 

HORSE SALE Oisporsai ol S*IeI Ol'etlng 60 head of 

rWlN FALLS. 2S.-000 sq. borsos ft lack by Loroy ft • • *QHA ft APHA. 

It. bldg , Will cortsider sub Judy Crist. August 14tb Weanlings, yoatlinga, 
dividing. Clear Spart. w/ Jotoma County Fakgiou- Tbros. ft broke borsos 

oHicos. dock, bo over nds. Pioview 0 00am 7. Gooding Co. ' 

hoaa doors Inoidtown. -Sala 1 i;30am. Batrol Peirgiounds. Ptovtow at 
possiWo rosinurartt Of to- — horse prospoctsr Mores. — lUOam.soloot l;00pm7-- 


I hoaa doors inoidtown. -Sale 1 i;30am. Batrol 
- -possiWo resinurartt Of to- — horse prospocisrMnros'' 
ia>l business Kon Rdyd. RoplngHoises. Brood 
736-8366 or 734-2050 Maros. Buckskin HoinitM- 


STRAW SWATHEH, Hos- . 
alon. 30' wide, pull lypo, , 
like new. SeK.'532-4l3 0.W 
SWATHER, Hossion 6450. 

14 II,, cab, AC. crlmpor, I 
oxe. cond.. SI2.000 Coll i 
-326-4605- ■ 


■ 708 

HAY. GRAIN 
FEED 


jQno day showing ol anist 
. Lyn Snow’e numboiod_ 

. , prints. This nationally .. 
rocognirod onist's work 
is being Introduced oi 
2ndTlmoAnjnd, 

689 Washington St.. TF 

SaLAus.7, 10am-3pm. ‘ 

Don't m/« a //// 
HOOSIER cupboard, whlio, 
oxc. cond., $495. Roll-top 
d0sk.lg,.$l50, 736-7641. 


736-8366 or 734-2050 Maros. Buckskin Hoinirtn- 


lico spaco Within Htr.tiod 
■" M wy-^ 0 ' F f 0 n 1 .TglTRair 
Siding 206-599 0G6QB 


,-|,SUPPUES^EQUlH-h!±2^^ 


AA. ■ A ~ HORSE. Groot w/ kids. 

_ XYunJLsLLSjiAOauiiaiO— MusuwnMixn n tahniwia 

wanted. Pioosocaii oic. inmoununns.$i200 
206-736-6126 ■ Coll 734-2740. ■ 


4-H prospoets. Soirol ■ FARM/RAMCH I 

Auctioneer Don Manning 

CaiNorcaialog324-79S0. AIR COMPRESSOR. $75 
M4-3301. 324-2347. 536- Drill press. $75. Forney 
2026. 637-4102. woidof. $12$. Colo shop 


326-460S’k— *‘-FA‘-FA..1999Jst.Cul-._ U-» av. rjo-ru4r ^ 

- ling, no roin, email bales,- IRON'BEO. aniique-$79 — 
TRACTOR • Ford ON. runs *70/lon or S3.S0/bale. Call 543.4 653. 

my.*«blSs“ano“J^(mo [plANO I047yicl0flan 


_ jau. L-ai b/d-^r.i5M Qoatliy, ADF lost avail. 
TRACTOR. Forman C. 3?° ‘P"®' SBO/'O". Call 
Huns oood. Plnann mil 655-1311 or 503-835-3003. 
. ^09-»S-56t2» HAY approx, 20 tons. Isl 


TWIN FALLS 
Buying or consigning- 
Anilquo Furniiufo. Lamps 
Slass ft Chino. Art, Jewelry, 


Musinngjyiuioaj.'tbooas-- EULE-WAOONSrNHi ieaoor-in-geod -weretirwr uxvn--- ■ u a20JHeIftAveJtorth 

«‘c.>nmountpins.$i200 1066.1046.1032. omor Wndiilen Call daw 88^ "I BIk No of Coins 

Coll 734-2740. ■ models. 459-3268 eves ■ 245t or eves. 034-S506B SSJ Mo'’-'Sai.. 

orTOr.487-2600. $39-2604. 7360300 









ss 


3 LINEs S 
10 Days 


For items under or adding up to $1000 (Maximum of 4 items please) 

(S 1 each additional line. Private Party only, Some restrictions apply. Merchandise only.) 

jThelimes-lNc^ Call 733-0931 or 677-4042 Today! 


I APPUANCES r i BUILDMQ°2iTEmALS |_MISC loR SALE | ’’"ffrll-ggi;""’"' "rr.,*: M°';^"d.’s'gg: 

’■sfL‘iirssis=£ 


’"calg7a3.S5d2®‘”"' ‘^‘;°LEH. S12S CAMDOWD CATTEHY. POMERANIAN pups, AKC, 


JENN*A1R elect. grin/rnAge SECURITY DOOR • black- EtfTERTAINMENT CTR • | 
w/ radiant & convecilon Wrought Iron storm door, black. 27* Fisher TV. like,. I 

bake over, like nowl S135flmi.Call423-44S7. new, $250 tel. Solid oak I 


1 — Sdi-HP'20* taemmower,~ -JUKI Commerelar surnerr- i/Arririu i^iitYi/ rx a 
• $30 /offer. Montgomery 4-throad. oxc, cond.. aiuchmems 
Ward trail bike. $20. Cah SI200. Remoldl commer- ^ 732.5272* 


has kittens lor sale: Per- $225. Call 403-29 

jran, HimalaYon. Exoflcs. ■ ^ 

825-5402 or 825-5460 ■ P U Q • A K C 1 r 


KENMORE’extra capacity I 


I JEWELRY SPURS I ?Xm 

$900,208-436-6054. VACUUM Rainbow spot 

DIAMONO'WeddIng eat, CELLULAR NUTRITION , cenne ioe-* -r 1... edition, water suction . 
women's, new 14 coral achmont 8 opholsiory I ios'aM-SiMB 

gold sollUfre w/-boguetto Cellular Nutrition **50. Kam^woy elide In ^rush. $600, 324-5305. ’ * 

. ■ . . X . - w ( ^hnnpiA ua.ip IJ«a X CSmfM/ CJth h mh S7X 9 


machine, $76. Montgom- COMPAQ. SVGA monitor. I**'® u*®® 5 wks.. pd. 

ery Ward Ig. microwave CD-ROM, aound, modem, ®''or $800, will sell for 
oven, $100. 736-2848. _ _P»lntor,.WIN.fl5..MS.OI-_ 

MIXER Kftchen Aide. H/D 97.S395. 733-1110 h OT E L R ET U R N S . 
model, now cond_,i_$150, _HP <8e,J6.mgJ?am„CO- -MaiuettetY-FULL-SIZE.- 
'436-8054. - nOM. prlntor. windows Cleon. $100. OUEEN 

WASHER A ndvsri* eiM 85- »<0<Vo«Of- 733-7665 Clean. $130. 734-0881. 


bunk. ' wedding bond. . asking "''I cjiango your life 5 high. $75. 2 

I Dd $eoo/ol)or Can 735-1636 atiliude. lip lo 20 lbs. in flpai lubos. eomploio w/ 

1 30 days. 100% natural. chostwodor.flnt&choos, 


WA8HERA0RYER.$17S. 

4 aio — I I-A2Y boy dual roclining 

^^^^8815. ■ __^0 sofo w/ drop lablo 4 

^ER. almost new with |^22s22^ I™*®; wtl,^i<2'l«?"n' 

"rewood for sole. Pine 738-76^ 

206 735-6556. A hardwood. 734-5727 


‘•■■faCl'closeout- 

on oil ramoinlttg Toro atxl 
OIxon ZTR mowers In 
stock. Savo Big Bucks. 


CEMETARYPLOTatSun- MOVING BOXES. $200 
: 7:B0tMomotinfS700.T«m5i: r.new.-trsed 1-.ltme. osfdng- 
for foe is covered. Please $50. Coil 732-5274. 
““324.5385. g7 ^TBc.-e.p..A. ..... 


I MUaCALaUMENTS 

III ENGLISH BULL DOGS. ^n«w»<>call«»-326-52e9. 
I DRUM SET -5 piece Pearl 8 females lofll One SCOTTfE pups, black. 
I w/ihrono. 14* hlah hai. |Jvm4 one brlndla/whlio. AKC. beaulllul. bred lor 
20* fide. 18* oowor crash Call cell a 1208)696-3341, -lemperemenf, champion 

FREE k.tlun., Blu. P.U,. 


COUMEROALPIZZAOV- ewUchos. ccno 6. $500. 


POTTER'S KILN, duol Crash (^Idlan). tfam’bou- rTlr^w marklras'!°Z 


V/tBH£R, almost new with 


WASHER/DRYER • Bought 

_ nowjnjpai, Maytag leL 

oxc.-concl; must sell- 

S4SO/olfer, Contact 
Trevor or Alolna 735-9495 
or 731 -51 56. 


MA1TRE8S/BOXSPRINQS 208-436-0558. 
Posiurepedlc, king size; ■ ' 

inko:new."S300.~Emefsbh: ROIOTILUER.COlttflmah: 
4-hoad VCR. $50. Call cholndrlve.soltpropollod.. 
644-1619. roar. 8HP, good cond., 

^ $326. Coll 324-3595 


Commerce cutler8_^^«* BN. clean cond. Works’ Call 735-1279. 

nVJ,S,®T^A°pS.?r«n *®“- S200/oflor, Indudos 

nccossorlos. CaM 208- REMEM 
. ^ 208-432. Thatbldhdayod 

■ 6022, Mu.laughCafo.B somotimoac 


6022, Muitaugh Cafo.B 
,E-iMLjrouLciaBsJt)ed ad_! 
b^nad®mlcron.nst I 


DRUM SET, now Roland 
PO-9. electronic, E Pearl 
throne. $2000. 735-8263. 


1 race ,« kpl».« nir SIAMESE purebred Seal 

Roland ^nVsh^o?d Lb^x Point kitions. 1 1 wks.. 
EPoan SLmIss ^ $35. Wkdays.. 9-5 438- 

va?ftT pupplos. 736-4806. 0623. wfcnda . 43frfl67S. 


$250* sTno*e^ashor! ‘^5rivJiA? 


BABY ITEMS matching $326. Coll 324-3595 " ^*ST TREK. Grow 6-10 

Simmons crib A chanalna RCLL TOP OESKi $300 -It./yr. S4,9S-$6,95, 

table $250 Arm. 733-4771 /Offer. SOFA BED, blue A 800 FOR SALE. Kentucky dollvorod. Pelted. Froo 
, ■ -ton..$40Cyofferp-73548a4 BlUO.Qrftaa, $.15tp«Laq Brochure.B0OdI5-3405.M. 


-lime locome-pM up your - — w/.ampJ»nd.hard.case- 

-'plcn;ros.-SIOobVTho $600,430-36617438-8155.- 

Service Dept qroan Baldwin w/ bench. 


nuMiaa rKeovt ”5. Wkdays.. 9-5 438- 

pupples. 736-4806, 0623. wknds.. 43^6675. 

^FREE, Border Collie A tn easy to advenite in disii- 
Shophord X pups. 9 wks. fled, Just cM 733-0931. 


$1 25. Warranty. 736-460S 


arid Crafts 
CHRlsntASSMOW 

1p80frO8-2274'-- 


CURIO CABINET • beauti- 
ful lighiod ceblnol, curved 
gloss front w/4 doors. S 
shoives. S2eo/e(ler. Call 

- -324-7544: 


812 

HEATIN B A 

AIR CONOmONINQ 


I Located 5 mis. N. A i 
' . mI.E. (520 N.148 E.). 
Shoshone. Call Shotler 
Nursery at 688-2399. B 


FAX 
YOUR 
AD 

TIMES CLASSIFIED 
DEPARTMENT 


RETAIL RACKS A self- 
servo lee cream freezer. 
I-73T5313: 


is U- ^ P“P*- "»w- '#1 pup- r -orrnMi,nirii;riT 

I pyahob. 5250. 645-2421, 

^ ^ LOB n,,nEWw Aitc p-h-YT' lATHE. moW. Soulhbond, 

SILEM T VIQI IM , Vnmaha 10X36. 3 A 4 law chucks 


■aiLEMT_viaur z-Ynm nhfl - -nrnn''hTnnm'in~ jLT' r.'~r i _lP’^6,.3.A^flH.chucka 
Oloc.w/caaeAbow.S600, Tunln and fZ^oTir 8i200/olf??: Coll 733. 
Please call 206-735-8263. 3003 or 733-2858. 


ATELUTB DISH In * ,». I CoH Kolfh Jorgonson ^ -"’®- ®'?i “®»! 1 1 

733-1298 


SATELLfTE DISH Ig. * re- Coll Keith Jorge 
eolver. beat offer. Whirl- 733-1298 
J®«'®®'‘®P'*OW' 'This MSI M our M 
• -AWVeffOf.- SOO eemp u ier — aisWTOJlwr 
sysiom * primer. Sl2S/ol- ^ i. ' . 

»ar, 737-9161, » A SoS 


Rainbow Vaeoum 2 vra waatlnghoueo. woll 

PlooM cheek your od lor old, $400 firm, Worrsniy. S'f,®,"!;,’’*'''' ’i-PPO 3 P Fli-for-Ufe body weigni ^na-CTT.^ 

eorroctnesa on the fW Call 844 -li 9 i. ^ BTU, like now, $ 22 S. mochlno.w/buitorty.ew, 208 - 677-4 

. .toy thainAJn»»aaJIie joa l ilnB ler eitre vscsi l en " JOftd,.SltXM«. 978 J 3 g 3 , (BURLED 

• mEAOMILTUiiieryTTodkT FOflD**6'6lllod. 


iaCONDmONERav?JL;:pPCEHaSEE6WHEWTj.|-^^^,^,„— UKurreT4^f.t;^^ 


“ 


1027-240, 7 cu, ft. capae- 


3 mo. old. $50. Must find ■ VARIETY FOODS 
a heme. Coil 326-3 122, | 4SUPPUK I 

LAB/SPRINQER X oups,_ 

• ~Panimroroaniuiin)rdtos aXo produce, 
and humors. S males. 3 vou pk* vegetables. 

New open, 3fe-3303.B 

\i.e X./P. n M raunrs A VEGETABLES 

•abb, AKC. Golds A Ivpry. for sole at Alexander's Or- 


I sia-good henie yeuvs betn 

-SSSSf**** 


irollomm, blaek w/whlie mg for someone t^o will manual. $l00/olfor. 
UIes.SynLefd.S70Q/offar^ .usa me. Pd.4SS0 new, . -Looney Toon incyeies. 
Please cell 206-423-6999 osklrvg $350. 324-5386. 00.825-5292 ' 


"PUf8DrfltfrS50,"Cto see cistslTieri'. . lor people' 
mother work. 487-2281 everyetierilTSOtoSt. 











JEROME 053 Tofon Or . 

- — frt,. -Sat, ^ S<^ ; O i lm - S pm.- 
Get ready (or winior lots of 
winter aottiing & kids stuff 


. 903 
BOATS & 
ACCESSORIES 


RECONOmONEO 
BAROAINS . 
■TVs . VCRs, stereo 

co«T©W'<nt 3 Easy term 


SAVINGS ON USED TVS. 
VCR A STEREO'S. 

Aa witn suarantces 
Easy terms 

Met Ousla'a Qecironks 


' S;iOOCnll 1 , 77 . 323 . 

••Thartk you (or your BOAT S TRAILER 14 It., 
•cocpemiion. • 40 tip Evirroae motor, 

TWiu B 4 i >a «-Mn .. 3 ._r .r'eoOs SOfTip TLC. $ 700 ;_ 
^ c. ^ oflof 208 - 934 . 9049 , 

.CO ot,. Sot. A Suri., 7 

‘am-eom Big Sale Cletti’ COLEMAN CANOE, 17 '. 3 


- AIRBORNE items'rrorr 
vvortd v.'ar 11 rtaii Cor 
meny Aso ertgirar eea' 


DO VOO HAVE ANTIQUES 
on COLLECTIBLES? 
V/e euy one itorn er a 

nauSle^J: Tar prices pe I 


LIVE TREES • Up U 30 a 
Sprues & enters. 

7883676 

PIANOS. WartMS-s«<lyOur’ 

usee p>ana7 we coy casn 

to* ycur usee Oiano 

Keith Jorgeneen 
733-1398 


SPORTS. Old sooriing I 


TWIN FALLS 3013 E. 3400 

~ ~rrrsaT : r r s i ' S 'SimTB/ r — COnsIgnlng'RV’s 
Som carK GoK cloDs, and BOQt'S ROW! 
guns, windows, toys. 90 S success sales rnlio, 
^0 Mr., tiller, much Oise - SNAKE RIVER RV 
A vaiuacuo coiioctibios A MARINE 

TWIN -FALLSraiO walnut: “’^'r^IT^llarr®*'’' '- 
St, Sat. & Sun, fl'am -1 

ont 

Twmu CAi I c u— INVADER 16 '. Ilsh (Indot, 

IS ^ ; I « Us. tovoi! 

SSfi^'ouihnr,' VnnJ-- loader iHr.. 54008 * 

Ailention. quilters • lOOS gu„. yae.ypiu ^ 

cotton a other latjfics.oas - -K 

rargo, fteo-stanaing Baa- KAYAK Parceplion Ark. 
ketBflit hoop. goK equip , 734>5724 or 430 - 4074 . 

some antiques, enionain- — . 
ment center, microwave. MERCURY, Trl-Huli, ' 60 . 
old trunk & suneoaos A I 60 hpl/ 0 , ia' 4 '.dei,eslo 
much, much mere. t'lf, Skis, vests A mero, 

veurelaaU«.k;, - b;r S 3000 . 423 . 4003 , msg.B 


sains. Chseh int ptrapa UONARK « New Pio ISO. 
S?*r.!f?S!S5S.'" *'•**'■ IS'.eOhpMereurylfolllng 
(ittCaiTasKWi. ^0taiJ]vA.wauL6taA 

TWIN FALLS 572 James 


I CROSS COUNTRY ' 03 . 
33 ‘ Class A'Moiofhomo. 
generator. AC. 454 en- 
gine, 42 K miles, now tires, 
has boon stored Inside, 
oxeolloni condition. 
51 6000 . C^ll 430 - 4864 . ■ 

OOOQE—t 870 Beaver, 
good ednd; low mileage. 
SSOOO/eftor. 733 - 1408 R 
' OOOpE.-'-IO-frrotOfyining ■ 
works, S 32 S 0 . Coll 734 - 
2597 or 430 - 411 2 . ■ 

DOLPHIN, - 04 . now Kros, 
good cond..Runs good, J 
Cleon A loaded w/oll Iho 
oxtros’ S 8 SOO. 733 -S 668 .a 


AHCTIOCAT, . 1997 . Thun- 
doreat, excel cond Lovr 
miles, must sett Gaii 203 - 
886 - 7562 .' evenings ■ 


EL DORADO ' 01 , doss C. 
35 K mi : new AC A ex- 
-hauaLsyalem^S 8700 - 
324-5852 or 324 - 3795 . 
FORD.. Muel-aell. Moving, 
25 ft. oxc cond. Qonalor A 
owning. Call 733 -; 875 R 
HOUOAY RAMBLER MO- 
. TORHOME, 1970 . 30 '. 
Class 'A. gon/AC. locks. 
TV. Runs groan S 9 SSO. 
See Om Plant 
Intflrmountain i 
Motor Homes, Inc. 

& RV Camp 
ExIllSS.WandsIL 10 
S09-8M-230t 
Mon. • SaL ■ flam-Apm 


ROBYN HOOD ' 80 :'? 3 'ti:: 
S 1 . 5 K. fully self coni., 

. -gon..S 9500 ?rwj 20 , 5909 _ 
SEE The BEST Bargains 
In Ihe Magic Valley for 
RV SALES A PARTS 
... on line - 

—wwwJdahorv .com - 

WINNEBAGO '00 22 '. fully 
-•elf-con|,- 6 . 0 KWOnan. - 
mlcrowQvo. AC. 34.155 
aciuot mis., SSOOO, good 
tires. 733 - 3 752 , msp.- 

ADVERTISE 
I YOUR' 

SERVICE SPECIALTY 
IN THIS DIRECTORY . 


twlnadgm lcfon.net 
HAY - AlfAifa. 200 Ion. 2 nd 
cutting, 212 b>g oalos. 
RFV: 172-180 300 Ion 
1 si cutllng, 344 big bales. 


! CcraoA. Pbc rsBjer 
j Ouai^aeaarv^ieard . 

NASH 

i hLr-Per One r* .^crna«!p 

i sumiERwiia) 

I ALrruxrm TnJox ' 


1 909 
SPORTING GOODS 
HUNTING SOPPUES 

, QOLF CLUBS. Spaiding- 
_ Exocuiivo. 3 9 . PW. SVV. 
putln'r, 13457 woods. 
McGregor Pro-bag. ready 
.Id play, SlOQ.. Ridgeway, 
cabin lent. 2 rm , i 0 xic'; 
sloops 6 - 8 , clean A ready 
to go camping-, S 7 S Trail 
Olaior 2 Burner, camp 
ileva, uses IP gos, SIS 
Call 735-1459 

QOLF MEMBERSHIP. 
Jerome Country Club. 
Calf 324 - 4779 , mesaage. 


BROCKUAN'S RV 

NEW 

_ Sumtner. haua 
for your aheosmg 
• conveniense 

BanVSpm' " ' 
SaLSam-7pm - 
1-64 Jerome E*e 16S 

324.4203 

CARRI-LITE. '89 Sih 

wheel. 29 fj . aluminum j 

“cohd*‘ 6 W*«'’g T 

Sales. Paul. lO 438 - 4 SS 0 | 
CfTATION 1977 2411 sen- 1 
Com_ SiBftfls fi. S3303..J 
20 e' 326 ' 5023 Ji_ I 


COACHMAN - ‘ 97 . S-h | .I'fl i .i * 

Wheel traiior. ain 101575 - l~OairSi 9 i 5 B 

•lioe-out ONLY® S 1 SXIC i 

Oowntawn WondeP | llo m iA, inc. 

S 36 -C 3 Z 3 afTVCanap 

~ . ■ ■ — I Erti 5 S.r>i «m 3 el .p ,■ 

FIREBALL B7 ««5 eona . : 

23 11.. istanp bed. aeff. ; “»a.-S«-*9»Sc-* : 

COrW.SrTS O. 733-4019 , ' 

" , ‘ — , lAYTCM 29 SL Sm sn. 

R;EETWOOOi9B2.ex3S. j aeensnr.AS.r«i«9aisE [ 

Park jt»eaal, yiirticona. ■; tmmaA»».9x3eamm. - 

Cympifiey lum. $bsoo ! gws oam. S 3 TOa CaOi ( 
_? 33 - 40 eB 6 JocI<taRann.i JOSJ 85 sa.at 35 >*CJO«ai - • 


Ave. Fn. Sat. A Sun. Barn- 
3 pm. Multi Family Sale. 
Lots of jeans, household 
Items and miscellaneous. 


rijiiigunig 


• 11 . 990 . 

BERT HARBAUOH 
MOTOR 

Downtown Wendell 
538-6323 




' 99 Che¥y 

Suburban 


w/tw.eonpt\ifo$.eom 

JUST A sHonr 0 /uve frou anywhere in the uaoic valleyi 








■ .. ANSWER: I would not drcarh of 

passing with a good scvcn-card 
op ened three suit, and I rate a two^liamond re- 

. oeanSk 3M partB erA»'*? l erl BH n h'j too per cent. A ia i3^ tU Iwm 

raarf^t^TuKiy. and I held spades, even at duplicate, doesn’t 


;Turra goog-ASKm(j'$aoO'— 

o» 0 r. Must ••III Call 
6C2-3322 or 670-3513. 


®*** wunaaitMTi. Pa. than in spades. 

MrrWoIIT; ^ 

"dupUcltUIO opened on=di. 

P“«"" doubled. 
■'P o spade, holding * A-g.9-7, » 6.5, 
mpt Urn [n ^ h,^, it to two hearts, which was passed 
S?™EESE‘^iI?“^'°^'^^“^"’'"^““>d“rhavcTirirafiiDi7“ 
pM than two minor-suit Neither side was vulneiable 


p^s. I suggest a pass, planning 
to ba fijc^ spades if partner bids 


CHEVY '06. 7^77. W tonr ' 
o*t.cat).CO.AC.PW.PU 
510,500. Can 734-<tg5« 

CHEVY • 1062 » ton 4» 4, _0m. sbl umto w.-timnty. tktf -3ja»or btp- 3513. 
iMdodTvwV good c^.. dudrsndlno drs.. very E-MAIL vour Oasof^d afl 
runs groal. 53200/offor. dependable. $1900 735- .. 

(CorToaedM23.sa50* ' 0a92er S43-e7lS.msa . twIned^mteorunM 
CHEVY 108G l-ton. 4x4. NtSSAH 4x4 PU Kno Cab, FORD 69 Tempo S1500 
w/ sorvico body. V8. AT. 1091. 78K mts.. 5-spd.. Vofydepondablocaf Can 

cioon & well-moinlainod. brand no«w liras. SSSOOr 20a-764-2Sa2Ji 

54900. 208-863 0061. <^or. 208-735-aSSOJI - 

— — -FORO--I9a2 L7I>.-4-dcior.- 

CHEVY Blnror SIO. -91. 4 „,«<.*„ q« p«.nr.„.<s., 69K miles, AT. AC. runs 

df.. oxe. cond . 57500. oroat.SlIOO. 53&5826M 

CoU 734-947S. ■ — 

tool. Mich. Doss tysiem. FORD, Escort GT. 1986 5 
CHEVY, 1M2, Short Qox. aocuMv. loadedi 530X100 spti Runs excel. New 
sharp cendillonl Please AMIer. Call Maty Atm. day tiresIETDCfotler. 733-9452 


OOOOE -85 1500 extend- TOYOTA •$ 
od cob. 78K. loaded, oxc. cond.. 529i 
cond.. 516.900. 543-5070. 733-3705. ■ 


LINCOLN. Cor^nentai. 

— 1»1..0003 cpno LMJJVrt 
rntenor. SSK 438 534SM . 

-MERCeOES B EN Z— 69 

280 SEL AT. PW. sun 
roof, new carpel 52500 . 

Car 543-8171 j 

MERCURY 91 Tepiz: &K I 
ixctual mts . S32S0. 200- ' 

934-4455 ■ 

-MERCORY-t99 3 Sas .g— 

3 8 Uer V6. good corq. ai 
options, S6300 737-cess 
MERCURY 1996 Tracer 
• Trio, tow miles, perleel 
card. Call 736- 72S2M.- . 


RmSURTOWIHA 
CARNmi CRUISE FOR TWO 
TO BE GIVFH AWAY DAIIY! 


iFOnO. Escod LX. '90. S j'HUSTANG - Sharp 1997. 


Cbe*pS«U.AliMMi«rn|i>e.N.M. oot»E- ‘97 Exi. cab., w/ 1 TOYOTA ’94 4 Runner. Coll -736-0927 


ANSWER: I would bid again. 
_ _ choosing two spades. You do not 

p^r Hr. We^ rate to get rich defending against 

topei<**cfab. partner responds two hearts. On the bidding, part- 
one spade. and I raise to twp ncr is veiy likely to have a mini- 
^des. u partner bids three mum double with four spades. 

and n^ hand doubles. Even if he has only three, you 
*^^^VO««fioDwithamm- be able to scramble enough 
!l6l=.toeort..good«or^ 

. taKts? DearMr.WoUE 

s> 70 r« 4 . CiiMwiispriiici. cafa.' At duplicate, I dealt and passed 
^ with A Q-9-6-5, V 7, 4 10-2. 

^pWEttftrtuerto Ibrue-beart -» A-K-J-IO-g-?. After p.rtncr 


..,522.000/- I cond.. lots ol 0 Klras, 5 sj 


OOOQE. ‘66 V5 ion, 4x4. 
AT. AC. 6BK mis. Call 
324-5912. ■ 


3058 aiWM 5 pm. AM/FM CD sloroo. till. 

' ’ ' - anii-tholl syslem. AC. 

TOYOTA % LoftdcnXsof. BANK REPO: Taking 


FORD-92F-150XLT.302. 678-6089, 734.57tXI. 

776.niMM63. 

dayi. Jr. 324-3276. evos. TOYOTA. -60 PU. black. 5 rtts. CaD 734-6656. ■ 
FORD '96 Explotor. V-O. 6 JP**- ''®‘ 

•MR. sun undar Wiurnmu ktt. campor aheP w/carp« 


., r , t ... . , . — #» ek-M-iv-u-r. niter partner 

y may b yre several mean i n gs, opened one spade in third scat 
Whate vy be g trying to utvesti- and RHO passed, what was my 
pte. a <fir^jainptofcarspades best response? 

muJ tfae correct mess age Mniona Pus, VsrkiswB itricbu. n.y. 


DearBfa-.WottE 

AC dBp6cate.'wttb both sicks-vat- 
nerable. I held A Q-9-3. V J 
♦ X^9-»-7-S-2. « A-J. and 
o pened ooe diamood. Partner re- 
sponded one spade, and RHO 
overcalled two clubs. Should 1 
base raised to two «pa<4<»n. r^id 


ANSWERr Many use a modern 
trutment for this situation. After 
an original pan; a Jump shlR in a* 
new suit promises good four-card 
trump support, distribution, and a 
good six-card suiL This treatment 
may be very useful to opener in 
assessing possible slam chances. 


(ur>Oafbool0.73S-9983.« TOYOTA. Tacoma. 1996. 
FORO • -83. 352 rebuilt lift 


FORO 1992 0X1. cob 4x4 
one. corxliUon. ouIm. tilt 
air. 510.900. Call 678- 
7583 or 677-2Q65.B 


GUARANTEED 

ADS 


tuUy powereo phs speed 
auto. AC. spooer. baaed 
makaoflar. 733-6394 


NISSAN • -SOOaCKmSIO. 
I hatchback. AC. AT. 
I STOeVofler. Cal 732-6202 


ouTSMoeaf i9bb cm- 

“TKtCMais. naeiSpgifg" 
enoino. S7oa>oner. 733- 
8742. 733-2951. Howwd 


PLYMOUTH. Sundance. 
1988. B8K. body rough! 
SgQ. Cal 732-6021. rrgg 
POKTIAC 72 LaUans. 2 
dr., funi good, needs 



1997 HONDA ACCOfiDSE 


SAVE BIG!: 

















THE KMART PARK 8 N© LOT 

IN TWIN FAILS 

.^1' 

mm 




VEHICU SOLD DURING THIS SALE, 

T A TZ « $ 9 A fails city pool 

■ k,v?&£sj .^fil %0'%0- Come Help Us Make Our Goal!!! 






$8,000,000 INVENTORY SELECTION! 


Register To Wiit j^hance In The 

lATHAM 
MONEY 
MACHINE!* 

The Value Of All 
- ' The Money-You ■ - 
Can Grab In 30 
Seconds Is Yours I 
I'o Keep''**''^ 





fDriV& iR'&t^'iVc 

ii^-=P^€IC ' 
@F /AKnr 


PRODUCT 5n biSplAY 


^ ^ / AdolH VS yodrs or older Wi 

Bvi^ '••! ^ '<> valVd 'drlVcr'-'s lV<onse» 


witlt 




6 nti per h'ouselveid, 
pledse 



iniiA a^' LdLiLa^ 


CHRYSLER • PLYMOUTH^ -- 
JDODGE • JEEP^* DODGE TRUCK 

510 2 nd A\c. S. • Twin LilL, iJniiK • 73 T '5776 




l^•io^.•^ Iilfcctiw ihru 
iIikI.iv Aul'U.sI I , I 99 ‘-^ 





Inside * 


Famil/Life . . . ; F3.5 

Seniors . .F6 


FMfuns I’jliUirSittY.Cniiiip - 7.H-09.H, H\i. JJ.i 


'I'hc Timcs-Ncws 


Sunday, Aiigusc 1. 1999 


We’r e wo rking 



Life,\nd: 

Times 

Denise Turner 





that those who 
te clothing are 
tnosqiBtoes (??X 


the heat 

How air conditioning 
changed ev^iytihing,. 


By Steve Crump 
Times Wewi witter 


TWIN FALLS - For newlywed Edith 
Scacc)', the one-room apartment on the 
second floor of Nellie Alexander’s big- 
pink house in the eastern Idaho town of 
Soda Springs became an oven when 
meals were cooked on the coal-burning 
store that stood in one comer. 

**\Vhen my brand-new husband came 
home from the mine in his brand-new 
1937 Ford con\xrtibIc. we sometimes sim- 
ply loaded the car with comestibles and 
ocher necessaries, and headed for 
llooper," a nearby mineral springs. 

’’There in the cool of the shade from 
the gazebo tn-cr the spring, we half-illlcd 
~oitf glas^ with-iht^parkling-fflineral — 
water, nrefully poured a measure of 
Seagram’s 7 dovm the side, sat down and 
enjoyed a Whisky Float. 

“Ahhh- now that was cool." 

In Idaho and most of the rest of 
America before air conditioning, you cook 
your cool where )-ou could Hnd it. 

‘‘Before air conditioning American life 
followed seasonal cycles determined by 
weather" says Chry^thc Broikos, cura- 
tor of a National Btmdiing Museum exhib- 
it calfc^ Conditioning 

America" in WasHingtoa. “Workers’ pro- 
duethit)’ declined in direct proportion to 
-th* teanmd-hu«r<nt7Tufsrde - on ifie" ' 
hottest days employees left work early 
and businesses shut their doors. Stores 
and tbeayn also dosed dow n, unable to 


of people m stifling interiors. Cities emp- 
tied ia summers as people fled the city 
' fortnauntazn and seaside resons. They 
coaled off by getting wet - opening up 
fire hydrant, going to the beach, or div- 
ing into swimming holes. 

"With too much heat and humidity, you 
couldn't function." 

There are those who argue that no sin- 
gle tedinology of the 20th century - not 
penicillin, not the microchip, not the tele- 
phone - has shaped (he way America 
Itrcs as much as air conditioning 
C o nsider; If it w eren't for a ir c ondition- 
ing. wc wouldn't have AstroTurt, or Las 
^’egds-ca5inoi.-TI>e^AmerTcu«-S«hbalr= 
would be still be the fly-spotted backwa- 
ter that it was during the first half of (his 
century. Hou^ would still come with 
porcties. and building facades would be 
covered from top to bottom with room- 
darkening window awnings. 

There wouldn't be shopping malls. 

And. goodness, kn'afvs, America ' 
wouldn’t snell half w good. ! 

"If man has. the intt^gcncc to heat his ' 
house in the Winter time, why docs he not * 
cool it in the summer?" ask^ Alexander 
Graham Bell more than a century ago. 

"We go up to the .Arctic regions and heat 
our houses and live. Wc go down to thc - - 
tropics and die." 

On the Snake River Plain, pre-air con- 
ditioned summers were dry and stifling, 
and primary economic activity was -pri- 
marily limited to forming and sugar tmi 
procfs.'ting. More sophisticated food pro- 
rewifig. which now accounts for perhaps — 

-ooe.fifth nf the inmme between-^axburg 

and Weiser, was impossible until J.R. 
Simp l qt started air conditioning his spud 
plants in the 1940s. . 

TnrfiKtrinl n tr mnrfitinfiin p p rimi . . 

dre at the start. Inventors produced all 
manner of devices that cooled air, flrst by L 
paCTng it over ice. and bter c ooing it by p 

_ meaig^of cbib contaming rcfng<:r-~ 
-ating agents 'an’d'cohdensers and com- g 



When Norman Rockwell drew this Saturday Edenlng Post eovor In the summer of 1940, fewer than 1 percent of Amfrleans lived or worked In environ- 
ments cooled by anything more eophletlceted then electric fane. 

How air conditioning, works 

It’s not just about cooling: Most air-conditioning units water in the system and . States, air-conditioning sys- 

Air conditioning is also operate by ducting air across replaces water lost by evapo- , terns arc commonly included 

designed to control the the colder, heat-absorbing ration. as integral pnrt.s of the stnic- 

-humidity. -dcunlinoM-nnd cir sidv-of-ii-rcfrigenitionxppam- - -— The-developmen t o f sm all— — mrcrPirstTised'abourT900in~ 

-c\dauoa^{iatLui:bi^diitemld:==:iusTei)d;direciiRg-4i^uckdnto==3eli-eontainedr4ystcm5rhss==ithc.'tBaalemdustry,-’air-condic= 
rooms. -V the air-conditioned space. Tlic greatly expanded the use of tioning found little use out- 

Indoor uir is conditioned refrigeration apparatus is con- air conditioning in homes. A side of factories until the late 

and regulated to maintain tile troll^ by some fomi of tlier- portable or window-mounted 1920s. It is of great impor- 

tcmperature-humidity-Tiuio mosiafT-ln-water-coolcd-Bir- uni fis usu ally~adet{nd t c fui tance-in-cherhicol-and-phai^ 

that comfortable and conditioning units, the waste one room. Often domestic maccutical plants, where air 

heating systems arc converted 
to provide complete air condi- 
tioning for a home. 

In the construction of office 
buildings in the United 


healthful. In the procc-ss. dust, 
soot, and pollen arc filtered 
out. and the air may be steril- 
ized, as is sometimes done in 
hospitals and public places. 


heut is carried away by a flow 
of water. For.rccirtulnilon in 
water-cooled units, a cooling 
tower is used. Hiis apparatus 
maintains a constant level of 


States, air-conditioning sys- 
tems arc commonly included 
as integral parts of the struc- 
-mrcrPirsnised'abourT900in~ 
:thc.'tBoile^dustry,-air-condic= 
tioning found little use out- 
side of factories until the late 
1920s. It is of great impor- 
-ttnce-in-cherhicol-a'nd-phai^ 
maccurical plants, where air 
contamination, humidity, and 
temperature affect manufac- 
turing-processes. 

- Sources; 77ic Co/umhio 
Encifclopcdia, Infoscck 




jOB W We ^^ ^ rt 6 n.^ ^^ lof.1997 aiKT 


■89.T • ■ - 

88.7- . 7ZZ’ '87 . 

!88.6 .734) 8T; • 

-88.B —72.8—^98— 

B6J .723 • 96 '. 


I •SoiTCru>rnSi«ncw>oi*CMrr.(Wi«rM>’WirBi)i''|' 

_pres.sprs; 

"These were for commercial purposes," 
•BroiksMi.said. "Meat-packing plants, - 


chocolate makers and Southern textile 
mills were among the first to receive air 
conditioning.” 

Not much attention was paid to cooling ’ 
off PEOPLE. 

"It was in the movie theaters in the 
1920s and 1930s where the public first 
sraned to cjtpcncncc air conditioning,’’ 
Braikos sold. 

"Talkies” were a mojor part of the 
impetus. If the audience was to hear the 
—octont’ diulogue.-ihcater-doors had to be 
dosed to keep out street noise. In dries 
such as Atlanta, that could mean ncor-suf- 
location and heat prostration without air 
..comUtioning^wluch.thai-dtyls.very-grand- 
Fox Tlicatcr inaugurated in 1929. 

Also that year, Frigidairc introduced 
_thc, first, room air conditioner.rwhJch was 
so bulky mid complicated it required a 
- spedal separate condensing unit. In 1932, — 


central air conditioning was first put on 
the market, and Philco came out with its 
first window air conditioner in 1938. 

But none of these things saw any imme- 
diate widespread use. 

A few economic seers ballyhoocd air 
conditioning as the industry chat would 
lift the U.S. out of the Great Depression, 
but the Depression instead depressed the 
market for it. In 1942, shortly after 
Amcrica.cntcrcd World War D, the U.S. 
War Production Board issued an official 
order banning the manufacture of air con- 
ditioning for personal comfort. 

The order was rescinded in 1945, and 
• by thB-oariy-1950sair condidoiung.was^-. - 
the rage. The plot of “The Seven Year ' 
Itch,” you'll recall, turned on Tom Ewell ' 
having a room air conditipncr_and neigh- 
bor Marilyn Mmuoc not. 

. .. - - Please sec AC.- Page F2 • 


fesil Checkout the Minidoka 

- hout Poe's ' 

We tried 


— so bad rhar 
dwkdasliv- 
pfifae. tracks if 


Count y Fair thi s wee k — ^ 

Today the Minidoka County 

-Fairgrounds in Rupcrt, includ- 
FAIRFIELD - The Camos ' 1”E canEval and raldway;8amcs- 
CdibiTFair wrap, np»iih the -JnihenlternooimifdcvenlnB. 


Tipsongivi 


amnial American Le^on break- 
tast on Blain Street fioni 7 to 10 
a.m. and a ■— 

music festivat-in . EBI 

ibe park frtxa 1 UH 

I to *6 pjtt. Crafts ^ 

~ and food'boothr 

wUI also be TSllTI 

open aU after- 


Uooiday through Saturday 


RUPERT - The Minidoka 
County Fair will run all week at 


. arts and enter- 

IHUm fair? m'e n t 

^ # i 4 civrtu through- 

♦o oanouth^tp- 

idniiiit^d 

• get an Item list- 

. ed in the calen- 

~dar, send it to Peatffres 
Department, The Times-News, 
P.O. Bax S48. Twin Falls 83303. 
Deadline is noon Wednesdays. 


Hwx are s^c tips on giving • 
arid receiving wedding gifts, 
from a brochut'c'-creaied by 
American Express Gift Cheques 
and ThcKnot.com . For more 
- information, - - check- • out - 
httpti/w.ww. thcknot.com/ for 
ovcrytliing from fashion advice 
' and budget tips' to registry ihfor- 
.mation. 

Ups for guests giving wedding 
gifts; 

• You don’t need to visit a 

^rc to ^y_from a couple’s reg- 
istry list. Ask' for the toll-frcg 
phtme number. * — • 

• If you receive an invitation,- 
you’re expected to send a gift, 
even if you can't make it to the 
wedding. 

• U you buy something basic 
like ‘a coffeemaker,- don’t stop 


there. Personalize the gife by- 
throwing in something extnLlike 
-a bag of gourmet beans or a pair 
of thugs. 

Tips for couple's getting wed- 
ding gifts; 

• Com plete your reg istry at 

least three monlhs'betore the 
wedding day. - • 

• Ccrader registering onlino. 

There are more placed than ever 
to register. • 

• Use your imagination. China 
and coolmrc are great registry 
basics, but what about camping 


. g ear or n co mputer? Visitroec^-: 
ty stores for ideas. Don't feel; 
awkward asking for contnbu-; 
tions toward big-ticket items like ■ 
youi' honeymoon or even a mort- ■ 

- gage.- T - 

• Send thanks soon. Gifts sent 
—before the wedding should bo- 
acknowledged within twin to four 
--wccks.“For ihose reedved after, • 
one month is standard. And be 
specific - don’t let your thank 
you note sound like a form letter. 
_PersbnaHzc it with an actual ., 
mention of the item. Gift-^vers.' 
will feel they’ve contributed; 
directly to something Important! 
in your life (a new house, cor or'. . 
skiing lessons) instead of just fat- 
tening your wnBet 

- Sounzr St Paul IHoneerPress 


1 


I 





M TInwfrMm, Twin Falli, Idnho Sunday, August 1. 1999 


Family Life 








SHARE A POEM WITH 
THE FUTURE 

You can be q pan of 
the future 8y 
getting involved In 
U.S. Poet Lau-realo 
Robert PInsky'i 
Favorite Poem 
Project ’ at 

tmg://wwwJavQriteDoem.orp/ Thii poetry project is traveling all over 

.(hc_country_to_rccoul-aii-lciada-of-p«ople-reading-ali-kind}-or 

poems before the year 2000, Check out the emotions and 
images captured in amazing poems like “Dreams” by 
Langston Hughes. Out DON'T just read them; listen 
to ihcfTi through lhe_ audio, clips on, the Web 
site.— You'll hear why poems are such an 
important way to capture .human 
experience. 



SOLDIERS WITHOUT SWORDS 

. The slO[y of the black press Is one of 
courage ' under fire. Thanks to PBS' 

Soldiers Wlheut Swords Web site, you'll 
learn about America's black journalists. Get 

blackorcss/ where you'll check out historical 
pub lic ations such as the Chicago Defender, 

California liagic and the Afr’d-Amerlcan. 

Soldiers Without Swords takes you to such 
Important events as the March on 

. Washington, the Red Summer Riots of 1919 
and the b^innlngs of the Civil Waf, while ' 

explaining how these events were crucial to the 
rise of black journalism. You'll ajso read about today's 
black journalists and publishers, who continue to make 
advances for the Industry. Read all about ill 



WACKV TALES 

Joln'DiclIonary jenkinslnlirMlIng some orthT^wildwt ' 
stories you'll ever see on the Net. At Wacky Talcs you 
choose the subjects, while jenkins simply strings 

the words together. Before you 

kn^ il.-you'll be readin g -about 
flying blue cats getting Into trouble, 
gigantic shoe that loves 
watching television. Come supplied 
with your, nouns, pronouns.and verbs and hop out to 

between carnivals, bicycle riding 'and fishing 
adventures, you'll meet nutty creatures like Frida the Cat 
and joe's Frog, just behave yourself at the ball game, 

•Iscgi And if you're suffering from. a case of writer's block, 

you can always check into many other great games from 
mSsfl FunbraIn,com. Wacky Tales Is a new discovery In 
wordsi 



Be a 4Klds Detective 

Visit these Web sites to find the answers, then go 


1 . On Wacky Talcs, an example of an adjective is? 

2. When was the first black newspaper founded? 

3. When dfd the Favorite Poem Project start? 


^Milieu tkMrt 
tktWsHd 

WMeWeh 


Dear Amy: For my report, / need to know who invented 
e-mail and when.— Lionel, Spanish Tbwn, Jamaica 
__pcar_Uonel;.Mos| people iise.ihc Intcmci for c-maiUbm. 
1 didn't find a lot of Informaiion nbourhow It began, 
According 10 “A Short History of the Iniemcl by Onice 
Sterling." hitD!/Av3.ncc5.uiuc.cdu/AIM/scnfg/ 
neihistorv.htm l the first e-m.iil program wu invented in 
- 1971. by. Ray Tomlinson. He put inogctlicr from two _ 
other programs, an intra-machine e-mail program 
(SENDMSC) and an experimental file transfer program 
(CPYNET). For more history about the Inicmci, 
check out this Libraty of Congress resource page of 
hllD://lcweb.loc.|»uv/dob3l/inlcniel/lnstorv.himt 

Dear Amy: How can tjind somtone to be my penpal? 
—Nathan: Uma, Ohio 

Dear Nailian: You can learn about whai other people 
, think and do by having ti penpal, especially if he or she 
live In onoiher country. A good plaee to find a penpal is 
on Kids' Space Conneetion at htip://www.KS. 
connection com/ Tliefe alt dirferenl penpal boxes for 
different ages.’Oefore'ybu siafiVread the Peii'pal'Help"*" 
page and dJseutt the Safety section with your paitnu. 
Remember, write oboui what interests you. but don’t 
send uny personal Information such us phone numbers, 

Send your questions about the WWW to: Ask 
Amy, 3001 Dole, .Lawrence, KS 66045 
or AskAmy®4Kids.org 

NETWORK OF REGIONAL TECHNOLOCV IN 
EDUCATION CONSORTIA Mtn;//rt«c 
>t*lptng'm*l>c ietknorriedper hsppeni 



Inspector Gadget’ turns Broderick into gangly super-hero 


Combined wire aofvIcM 


Offensive language: No 
Sex: None, 


-•^•''inspcct^G_^et”xPGi:rJleelrr::.-.^^ 

Tiiualcr of Twin l-alLs, Motor-Vu Drive-in ^ guys violence. 

Farcntal advisory: A throwback to the 


supposed to be funny because an old 
ladyis.^aying.u._ 


MPAA’s standards, or the general 
decline. oL Western civilizationr-The 


- _ Drive-in 

of Twin Falls, Century Cinema of Burley, 
Jerome Cinema, Magic Lantern of 
Ketdium.-' 

Best for 5- to 12- year-olds. It’s along 
the same lines of "Flubber.” 

\Vhiit it’s about: John Brown (Mattiicw 
Broderick)- js .n naive security guard who 
gets into an accident and suddenly 
becomes the best candidate for a top-" 
secret operation by Dr. Brenda Bradford 
— UJQ e l y F is h*r) -Johnls-oporation-trong- 
forms him into a super sleuiii with 14,000 
useful devices. Witli help from his niece 
— tMirhellp Trnduenbcrg)-and-a-talking- 
car coiled the Gadgctmobile, he tracks 
down Riverton City’s dark and sinister 
Claw (Rupert Everett). Cheri Oteri, 

Dabney Coleman also star. 

The good: In a summer of few family 
-movies, this is one you can take the kids 
to. They’ll enjoy the many wonderful 
g.idgeis that make Broderick fly, run 
fast, etc. Everything from John’s car 
explosion to his operation to the way he 
■gets the- bad guy is done in an overtward 
comedic style so that kids don’t take any 
of it too seriou.sly. There are funny one- 
liners tliat adults may get and kids proba- 
bly won’t, but that’s wliat makes it wor|< 
as a family film. Look for an action-chase 
scene that shows Broderick doing a mon- 
ster sjwof from -last summer’s "Godzilla” 
(in which lie also starred). In another 


days of family movies that could be 
enjoyed by botlt younger kids and adults. 
Older kids and young teens saturated 
tvith the foul language, violence and sex- 
ual overtones of this summer’s otiicr hits 
(‘■South Park,” ^'Wild Wild West,” 
"A^ tin Powers”) may find it luring. 
Ehicrtainmem value: B-f 
♦ "Lake Placid” (R) - Reel . 

— Theater-of-Tmn~Fnlls7%ent u r y 
Cinema of Burley. '.w 
Best for Mature teens to adults 


What it’s about: Kelly (Bridget 
Fonda) is a New York City pale- 
-onnjlogisrcalledTTnfelp deier^ 


Sex: Only bctween the crocodiles off ' entire movie is onebig playground'pf Stix 
and sexual innuendo. On the other hand. 


Violence; A 30-foot crocodile eats a 
• blindfolded cow in one quick bite, a man 
is attacked and pulled out of the water 
witJi half his body bit off, a head is found 
. in the tvoods. 

Parental advisory; This would be a 
scary movie for a child or young teen 
because it doos-liavc enougti fright ele-- 


ihe movie’s infantile Icvei of humor is 
the cinematic equivalent of a baby gig- 
gling while smearing his feces on the 
wall, so maybe nobody over the age of 13 
should be pcnqfitcd to tec it. (95 min- 
utes) (Twin Cinema, Liberty TTieater) 

♦ “Baby Geniuses” (PG) - It’s possible' 
that kids vdll bc chamied by seeing rc3 


tsk-tsk attitude'toward prc-maritol sex. 
— i^tastead,-it-takcs_a;tvtimrand:aCcepiinB 
view toward human nature, in all its 
unpredictable whims. “Netting Hill” 
tells the story of a mild-mannered brok 
merchant (Hugh Grant) whose life is 
. turned upside down when a famous 
movie star (Julia Roberts) walks into his 
shop. (Reel 'Theater ofTwin Foils) . 

* “Star Wats Episode 1: 'The Phantom 
Menace ” - T he youngenyour kids, th/» , 


. mine what killed a man found in 
a Maine lake. She join.s ttn inves- 
tigative team that indudc.s Jack 
(Bill Pullman) a game and fish inspector. 
Sheriff Hank-Kcough (Brendan Glccson), 
and Hector (Oliver Platt), an eccentric 
with a tiling for crocodile.s. Soon tlicy ttre 
all hunting a 30-foot crocodile. Betty 
White has a cameo as a foul-mouthed 
woman who sides \vitli the crocodile. 

The good: Though it is campy, has 
cheesy computer animation, a weak 
script and a weaker plot. If you want.to 
be scared by a “Jaws”-type movie, this 



. .. o , more they will enjoy this adventure. One 

babies walk and talk. But the of the film’s heroes is 9-year-old Anakin , 

younger ones won 't understand Skvwalker, and he gets m rntor pf I 


... al.so... 

• “Arlington Road” (R) - This is a 
throwback to the Hitchcock style of 
' tliriller that delivered a message \vhile it 
scared the audience. Mature teens might 
enjoy it. Tlie message and .situations are 
too mature for younger audiences, who 


~lhe story - a complicated and silly' 
'talc about an evil German scicn* 

tist trying to mold 

master raccT And anyone old 
enough to follow it (from age 7 
and up) won’t want to. (94 


'Big Daddy” (PG-13) - Adnih 
Sandler is the living embodiment 
of the PG-13 rating Just think of 
his movies as crua<^humor work- 
out tapes. In "Big Daddy,” he gives 
growing up a try, but parenw needn’t 
worry about anyUiin'g such as adult'texti- 
ality looming - a good-r\ight kiss is as 
close as Sandler’s Sonny Koufax gets. 
Breast jokes abound, however, and wait 
until you hear this movie’s idea of per- 
fect p^entihg. (95 -minutes) (Grand Vu- 
Drive-in of Twin Falls, Cenniry Cinema 
of Burley) 

“The Haunting" (P(^13) - 'Tills movie 




the exaggerated .sexual themes. 
Entertainment value: B-. (Twin Cinema, 
SkiTime Cinemas of Ketdium) J 

• “Austin Powers: The Spy Who 
Shagged Me” (PG-13) - An object lesson 
in, depending on your perspective, the 
bankrupt meaninglessness of the 


the most exciting action scenes in the 
entire George Lucas canon. Parents may 

Jiaye_trouble.cxplaining.to.thcii^younger-- 
childrcn that this likable young boy 
grows up to be the nefarious Darth' 

I . Vadcr. Most of the violence is of a blo^- 

— utes) (Rcel-Tlieaterof-Twin Foils) lesSi-comic-strip-mannerTiiormeant to be— 

I ♦ “Big Daddy" (PG-13) - Adorn taken seriously. (130 minutes) (Twin 
Cinema, Gooding Cinema) 

• “Tarzon” (G) has something for 
everyone. Older kids should go for thtf 
way the king of the Jungle surfs the 
vines. 

Younger kids may favor the diaper 
jokes. Parents will appredate the sensi- 
tivity of the adoption story as Tanan 
learns about the nature of love and fami- 
ly while he 'struggles ivith whether his 
place is with the gorillas who raised h^ 
or the humans he meets as a man. (88 
minutes) (Motor-Vu Drive-in of Twin 

Fa lls, Shoshone Shojvhouse) , 

~ ~~» '%ild Wild Vj^sfL(PG-13) -^Boys^ 
oetween the ages oPlO and 14 will-be— 
among the most enthusiastic audiences 
for this action flick. Bu t have 


- bui young Kias octinitcly will get 
nervous. (120 minutes) (Twin Cinema, 
Century Cinema, Magic Lantern 
Cinema) 

'• “Notting lUli” (PG-13) - 'Hiis one has 
all the earmarks of a great date flick. 
Parents should know that it contains a 
few naughty words and does not take a 


unbelievable and the adventure is pure 
kid fantasy based on the cartoon, so 
everyone can simply enjoy it. 

The noi'So good: Older kids probably 
won’t like it as much as younger ones 
because it's.so .silly. 


couple of brief scenes showing a decapi- 
tated head and a man’s body cut in half. 
Adults will be more entemined by the 
sarcastic one-liners and comcdic banter 
than frigiitcncd by the crocodile but it 
still has a few intense scenes. 

Offensive language: Lots of it, but it's. 


Thanks a million, Uncle Howard 


■'IVt* arv hin to add what ive can to Ufa not to get 
hat iiviiinfmtnit.’' 


Sicken 

aoiip' 

'^"'"'<$’0111 


fnthtsstorybifKaihkVTiDifX)n,awomanlcamsthat 
love Vahnot be contained ftp sickness or death. In 
Kathleen's ivords; thcTighraninidclseveryihiii^. 

* In the 1950s, locol banks sent personalized diccks 
. to noncustomers to try c6 generate new business. I 
___MfasJ.ycafSjjltLaml.pfouU.of- my- new-wriring-and— 
spelling abiJititts. so 1 bogged my parents to let me 
have some of iltlsu diccks. 

In our family, spcdol occasions meant 
gffuj from parent.s, siblings and friends, 

but from others-it meant cards with 

money. Birtliday, Christmas and gradua- 
tion cu-ds nilcd.with ones, hves, 10$ or 20s 
- crisp and unwrinklod - meant “I love 
. you.” So, using Uiese advertisemeoi-^ni- 
mick checks, I followed the tradition. I 
would make homemade cards'- heavily 
colored and flowco’ with prose and poetry - with a 
bogus dicck inside liiat was made out to the honorcc, 
the amount of thecheck a p propriate for the limlts of"' 
my love. Formy brothers, it was $1. For my parents, it 
. was thousands. For my Unde Howard, it was $1 mil- 
lion. - 

In July of 1958. it was a Sunday dinner birthday"^ — 
celebration for my uiiclc. He opened the card I’d 
made, read tlie message inside and looked for a long 
time at the' check I’d endosed. Smiling at me from 
across the dinner table, he tliankcd me for the card 
,and chedc.'Hc took liis wtUJci out of his Ixick pocket, 

_ fgkled and tucked the chcdcawoy, and said, “ril just 
TteeVthis'witlimc'until 1 need if." 

Tllirty-five years later, Pm sitting drinking coffee 
early in the morning at tiiat same dinner table, across 
from die same smile, ticoring die some voice and shar- 
■ Ing the same memories of those 35 years with the 
same Unde Howard - probably for the last time. My 


I 


unde was dying of cancer. Radiadon and diomodiont- 
py Iiad done no gopd, and Ujc treatmonis hod ended, 
so hts crewcut was growing back. Tlie nnasca that liad 
plaRu^cd mm during irentmont was no longer a prob- 
lorn, and no was cnting.again and.puttrnR on the 
wclglit he had lost. Silting there talking-about the 
good old days, 1 could foolmysclf into thinking this 
was a plcoimru vi.<dt, nnd Utat tltcre would be outers.' 
But I knc\v tliat this visit ivas for goodbye. 

Putting down his coffee mug, he reached for his 
htp pockOt. Unfolding his wallet, he readied inside 
and handed me a pole blue slip of-paper. folded in 

half,'-and*teld.--Roitfefnb«rUUs?”Tn'crenibljnncro 

was tlfc birthday dieck for $1 million. He had kept it. 

carrying it witli him, shifting it from old 
. wallet to new wallet for 35 years. 

“You never tried to ensh iCrjokcd.'' 
"I never needed ll,” he .said, "111 just 
keep this witli me a little longer, in ca se I 
do need it.” And he put it away once 
more 

'Llcfi liim that afternoon, tlie final 
hugs, luiol kisses, the Hnal goodbyes. 

- Four-days-latcr, he was-gone, and I 
returned to Arizona for die funeral. I had used up all 
my av aila bl e time off from work, so I couldn’t stay 
Tortg; tlich: was so much grief and sorrow tliat I didn't 
to anyway. So after saying thc'polite goodl^cs, 
^ving the polite hugs and kisses and givi^ tlie polite 
reassurances to keep in touch, I loft.' 

Twcrdays'laier.'upon returning horhe finm work, I 
foimd a UP^ parcel on the kitchen table, die. hand- 
wrinen address from my aunt in Arizona- Inside that 
package, iliero was a smaller one with a sliort sen- 
tence m Unde Howard’s handwriting. "Since I don’t 
need tills anymSt, I thougiit you might wont it back. 
With love, Unde Howard..” - • 

Inside was tho dicck for $1 million, mounted on a 
5-by-8 piece of pine. Thanks Unde Homini, for a love 
that lasts longer than a lifetime. 

To submit a story for future publication, sendit to P.O. 
'"'''''0, Santa Barbara, CA 93130 


AG. 


will be surprised aAd possibly disappoint- 
ed at how subdued he is. "The rating is 
due to salty dialogue, an abundance of 
obviously fake violence and the promi- 
nence of bountiful dccoUctage, shown by 
women who enjoy breathing heavily. 
(110 minutes) (Reel Theater of Twin 
Falls, Grand-Vu Drive-in of Twin Falls) 


Continued fr^ FI 
Tlie room variety was the most 
common but remained a noisy, 
very intrusive device. , 

“Air conditioning changed 
housing design completely.” 
B^oikos said. '(Berore It, houses 
. had porches, extended caves, 
awnings, high ceilings, base- 
ments, upper floors and attics. 
Incorporating air conditioning in 
_ib.QJlfi£DYachousiag.booBvfhcy.- 
found it added SI, 000 to 52,000 
to the cost of a new house (then a 
huge amount).' 

But by climinating.tho oaves, 

porches, high ceilings-and the— 
rest - which they coidd do witli 
air conditioning - they, were able 
to save that much or more. 
Houses began to be on one level 
and housing developments 
beg a n to sp rawl.” 

Nationwide, 83 percent of the 
new homes built in America last 
year had central air. In 1973, it ' 
was 49 percent. 

The country also began air- 
conditioning itjielf while- in 
motion between home and the 
workplace. The first air condi- 
tioned car. in America,-vfouIUn‘t — 
you know, was a custom- 
equipped 1930 Cadillac owned 
by a Houston businessman. 


But again, for economic rea- 
sons ond subsequent wartime 
shortages, it didn't catch on. By 
19S5, only. -10 percent- of 
American cars had factory- 
installed air conditioning. ' 

This flgilrc rose to 23 percent 
in .1965 and more than- doubted 
to 54 percent in .1969. Now it’s 
standard. 

The most sweeping effect of 
irair-eonditio aing - was tD'halrand- 
reverse the migration of people 
from the American South to the 
North, ultimately creating tho 
Sunbelt. . ' 

In 1910, people fleeing the hot, 
impoverished South created a 
net .out-migration of obout 1 mil- 
lion a year. 

. By 1940, that flow, had risen to 
a net loss of 2.5 million a year for 

jhe.TCoon- _ . 

' With the advent of postwar air 
condicioning,.the.nct-loss-fcll 
back to 1 million a year in the 
1960s. -Durihg the 1970s and 
1980s, the South received a net 
Infliix of between tnlllioA'and 
3 milUon people a year from the 
North. _ _ _ 

"T?fes6uthwo7d fl'dw'jios contin- 
ued, in the 1990s at a net rate of 
about 1.5 million a year. 

Air conditioning has led to the 


widespread production of all 
manner of now-everyday comom- 
nploccs that require very care- 
fully controlled environments for 
their manufacture: drugs, high- 

- resolution film, CDs, textile 
fibers and even delicate pasta. 
Most offices, which depend on 
mainfnunc computers housed in 
air conditioned environments, 
couldn’t function with it. 

In*more'gnrgantuah''(crinsnr^ 

has resulted, in “placelcss 
spaces” - enclosed, controlled- 
environment, large-s^c intcri- . 
ors. housing structures or actiri- 
ties that can be constructed any- 
where - including the hlgh- 
desert badlands of Idaho. 

“Xhq technology of 'ensit 

- necred airi has changed our r«^- 
tionship with nature itself by cre- 
ating indoor artificial climates, 
shifting seasonal patterns of 
work and play,- and making 
America’s geographic differ- 
ences environmentally inslgnlfl- 
cwt,” Braikos said. ... ,, 
■.-■The Chicago Tribune con'' 
mbuted to this report 

■ Timcs-Ncws writer Steve Crump ' 
can be reached at 733-0931, Ext ■ 
223, or write fo him at 
oump^agicua//cy.cDm 




1 


Sundiy.Aueuitl.1999 Titn»*««wt, Twin Fall*. Idaho M 


Family Lifl 


-Engagements 


STRADliR-BUOWN 

TWIN FALLS - Thomas and 
Nancy Strader of Twin Falls 
announce the engagement of 
•their daughter. Shauna Koylec 
Strader, to Lyrrti David Brown, 

wn of Douglass and Uida Brown ; 

ofHcybum. • 

Stnider graduated from Twin 
Falls High School. She is 
•employed at Pox Floral in Twin 
Falls. 

- Brown graduated from Minico- - 
Hjgli School. Ho is employed by 
Commercial Tire in Twin Falls. 

The wedding i.s planned for 
Saturday. • 


CrAM-H 1 !I.\VICH 

MURTAUCH - John and - 
Sheny Cnun of Cheyenne, Wyo., 
announce the engagement of 
, their daughter, Amy Elisabeth . 
Cram, to David Aaron Hclwich, 

son of Don ond-Mnry HelTWch of-" 

Murtaugh. 

Cram Is a 1995 groduatc of 
Cheyenne East High Sdiool And 
is a 1999 Phi Beta Kappa gradu- 
ate of the University of Wyoming 
in Lammiu with a degree in polit- 
icdl science. She will continue 
her studies at.thc University, of. '. , 
Pittsburgh this fall in the mas- 
ter's of public administration pro- 

gram.' 

Hchvjdi is a 1992 graduate of 
Valley High School and a Phi 
Beta Kappa graduate of the 
University of Wyoming with a 
master’s degree in communica- 
tions. He tvill continue his studies 

_ PARKjNSON-Pai'Y. 

BUHL"-— Qiiln"and -Susan 
Parkinson of Mountain View, 
Wyo., announce Uic engagement 
of. their daughter, Jennifer 

' Parkinson, to Travis Doty, son of 
Monty and Darlene Doty of Buhl. 

Parkinson graduated from 
Mountain View High School and 
attended Central _Wyoming._ 
College in Riverton, Wyo. She is 
employed at Melaleuca in Idaho 
Fails. 



Breedw-Abkrnathy 

DEXTER, N.M. - Neil and Shill 
Br'cedyk of JJcxier, N.M., and 
• Jack Rietkcrk of Anchorage, 
Alaska, announce the engage- 
ment of tlicir daugliier, Radiclle 
Rietkcrk Brecdyk, to William- - 
Ronald Abcmatliy, son of Fnmk 
and Claudia Abernathy of. 
.Roswell, NJlL 

Brecdyk is a graduate of 

I ^“*Wr.High School in Dexter.; 

' Sh"e is'empToyed at Kwan Den 

Restaurant in Ro^-cU. 

Abernathy is a graduate of 
Roswell Higlj School in Roswell. 
He. is employed by Roswell 
Livestock in Rostvcll. 



Rochello Breedyk 
and William Abomolhy 
The wedding is planned for 
Saturday. 


' David Helwich and Amy Cram 
at the University of Pittsburgh 
litis fall in their PiiD (rhetoric) 
program. 

. Tlie wedding and reception arc 
planned for Saturday in 
Cltcycnnc. An open house be 
held Aug. 15 at the Hclwidi resi- 
dence. 


GraboHansen 

'TWIN FALLS > Burton and 
Connie Gnbo of Glendale, Aria., 
announce the engagement of 
thoir daughter. Sandra Anne 
Grabo, to Trent llyoh Hansen, 
son of Randy E. and Annette 
Hanson of Twin Falls. 

Grabo Is a graduate oC 
Ironwood High School in 
Ariaona and is o student at 
Ricks College.. She has been 
employed for the summer at a 
Pro Fitness business office in 
Piiocnix. 

Hansen graduated from Twin 
Full.s High School and served an 
LDS mission in the New Zealand 
Auckland Mission from 1996-96. 
He is a student at Ricks College, 
majoring in computer aided 
drafting. He has been employed 
ot Team America Corp. in Twin 
FaUs. 



GirniRiE-Hiu.sK 

I HANSEN - Kevin L. and Anne 
I Giitlirie of Hansen announce tlie 
engagement of their daugluer, 
Amy Eliziiheth Gutlirie, to Ryan 
James Hiilse, son of James D. 
and-Jaiiice Hul.sc^f EincdlrT~ 
Neb. • 

Giultric-graduotcd'from IHrin - 

- Falls High School and attended 
_ . Ricks College.. She served a mis-. 
|ii^_sion-Tn-tho-Califoniin Anaheim 
Rtisslon. She is employed at the 
Profit Recovery Group in Salt 
Lake City. 

Huisc is a graduate Norris 
High School and is attending 
Brigham Young University in 
Provo, majoring in chemical engi- 
neering. He scn'cd a mis-sion in 
the California Anoheim Mission. 



Amy Cuihrle and Ryan Hulse 
He is employed by the Clicm 
Engineering Department ni 
11 YU, 

The wedding is planned for 
Aug. 13. 


Rasch-Bush 

JEROME - Mr. and Mrs. University of Idaho. Shu is 
■MichBel--Tlasch' '6f^-Jeromc ‘"'employcd oy Crowder'Assbaaies'" 
announce the engagement of in Boise, 
their daughter, Rachel Rasch, to 
Theodore Bush, son of Lindn , 

.Vining of Jerome and Albert 
Busli of Seattle, Wash. 

Rnsch is attending the 


Buslt is aisp intending the U of 
I. He is employed by JUB 
Engineers in Boise. 

The wedding is planned fur 
Saturday. 


Trent Hansen and Sandra Grabo 
The wedding is planned for 
Friday at the Logan, LDS 
’Temple in Logan, Utah. A rcccp- 
tion will be held Saturday at the 
White House in Twin Falls. 

The co'uplc will reside in 
Rexburg to continue their edu- 
cation and graduate in the 
spring. 


Doty is a graduate of Buhl 
Higli School and the College of 


of applied science degree. He is 
employed by Coca-Cola in Idaho 
Falls. 



The wedding is planned for 
Saturday in Bri^am City, Utah. 


BEA^'IS-SLAGEL - 

TWIN FALLS - Mark and 
Pauline Beams of Twin Falls 
announce the engagement- of 
their daugluer, Chcrcc Beams, to 
Devin Slagcl, son of Barry and ' 
Marian Anihoney of Filer and 
Dean Slagcl of Sumner, Wash. 

‘ -Beams is a graduate of.Twin 
-Falls High School and D&L 
Academy in Twin Falls. She is 
‘Employed at Snipz 152 as a nail 

lechnidan-inTwin-Falls.- 

^lagel is^a. graduate of.Filer^- 


- •HigfrSchoolrHelsemployedby 
the Twin Fails City Fire 
Department. 


Devin Slogel ond Cheree Beams 
Saturday in the rose j^irden at 


— Moss-Clark 

DECLO - Daniel and Jann 
Moss of Decio announce the 
engagement of their daughter, 
Mandi Jane Moss, to Jeffrey 
Chad Clark, son of Alan and . 
Janet Clark of Albion. 

Moss graduated from Dedo 
High School. She received an 
associates degree in accounting 

and a nail technician’s li cense 

from ‘iBaho^ State university in 
Pocatello. She is employed at 
D.L. Evans Bank’s operation 
— center In'Burley: ^ 

Clark graduated from Dccio 
High School and attended Utah 
—Statft nnivetsity— in-Logan, — 
Utah. He is a veterinarian assis- 
tant at Clark Equine Clinic in 
Albion. 


Sandy-Trenkle 

SHOSHONE - Ed and Janet 
Sandy of Shoshone announce the 
engagement of their daughter, 
Cathcrync Elizabeth Sandy, to 
Eddie CyTrenkle, son of Fred 
and Nita Trcnkic of Ketchum 
and formerly of Twin Falls.- 
Sandy-graduated-m4996-from— 
Shosh o ne High Scho ol jand 
Young 



Mali.ory-Durham 

TWIN FALLS - Slieryl Jordan. 

— of Twin Fulls, .ind Russ and— 
Denise Mallory of Burley 
announce the engagement of 
their daughter, Kellie Lee 
Mollory, to Jared Larson 
Durham, son of DcAnna and 
Frank Durham of Twin Falls. 

Mallory is a graduate of Twn 
Falls High School. She is 
-employed at-Washington-Mutual- 
Bank in "Dvin Falls.’ ~ ‘ 

Durham is a graduate of Twin 
Falls High Sdiool and is current- 
ly attending the College of 
Southern Idaho. He is employed 
by D & F Construction and 
Dominos Pizza in ’Twin Falls. 

The wedding is planned for 


Skabronski-Sweesy 



Jared Durham and Kellie Mallory 

Aug 20 in the Bountiful Temple. 
A rccupiion will be held from 7 
to 9 p.m. Aug. 21 at the LDS 
Omrdi, 847 EnsUand Drive N. in 
T^vin Falls. 


Chad Clark and Mandi Moss 


ihc wedding is planned for 
Friday in the Logan LDS 
Temple in Logan. A reception to 
-honor the couple- wili-be-held- 
from 7 to 9 p.m. Friday at the 
Moss residence, B50 E, 450 S. in 
Dedo. • 


DARRiNcrroN-CAPPS 

DECLO - Tim and Jana 
Darrington of Dccio announce 
the engagement of tlicir daugh- 
ter, Melissa Darrington, to Scan 
Capps, son of Dennis and Sandra 
Cappsof Jerome.- - 

Darrington graduated from 
Dedo Higli School in 1997. She 
is majoring in business manage- 
ment at Boise State University 
'and is employed at Uic BSU reg- 
istrar’s office. 

, Capps graduated from Jerome 
High Sdiool in 1995 and served a 

■•'Canada Calgory Mission for thc " . . - 

Church of Jesus Christ of Latter* - - Temple ln Logon, Utah. A recep- 
day Saints. He Is employed by don will be held that evening at 
Ole International of Boise and the Sweethe^ Manor in Burley, 
working loword his Realtor’s . An open house and barbecue wul 
. iieen<pinihpf nii. b e held Friday at the Capps resi- 



attended iBrigh) 

University in Provo, Utah, major- 
ing in exerdse physiology. 

Trenklc gj -adiiated ii 

n Twin Falls High School and 
served a LDS mission in the 
Massachusetts Boston Mission. 

. .He plays basketball for Mesa 
State College in Grand junedon^ 
Colo., where he is majoring in 
cducadon. 

The wedding is planned for 


Cathoryne Sandy and Eddie Trankle 

Friday in the Idaho Falls LDS 
Temple. A recepdon will be lidd 
in ihcir honor Saturday. 

The couple will reside in 
Grand Junction while they con- 
dnuc their cducadon 



Sean Capps-and MeUsaa Darrington 
Thursday at the L6gan LDS' 


The wedding is planncd'for aence th Jerome. 


Bair-Zogg 

• RUPERT - Curris-E; and 
Georgia Bair of Rupert aiinoimcc. 
the engagciricnt of tlicir daugh- 
ter! Nina Bair, to Sam Zogg, son 
of Theddori; and Gcorgene Zogg 
of Moline, Kan. 

.-.Bair graduated from Minico 
High School and Ricks College in 
Rexburg. She served an 18-. 
month Brazil San Paulo South 
Mission for the Church of Jesus 
Christ of LQttcr-day Saints. She is 
a physical education major ot^ „ 
Brigham Young University in 
Provo, Utah, and Is employed at 
the Mission Training Center in 
Provo., . . 

Zogg graduated from 
Coffcyvillc Junior College in 
— Co ffci^ UcrKan.ran d -serwd- a - 
two-year mission to Brazil for the 
' LDS (^urch. He Is a math major 
at BYU in Provo. 

. The wedding Is planned for 
Saturday in the Bountiful LDS 
Temple in Bountiful, Utah. A 



Sam Zogg and Nina Bair 

3-honor the-ctraple 
Avill be held from 7 to 9 pjn. that 
evening at the Acoquia LDS 
Church, 204035th St. 

The newlyweds will reside In 
Provo to continue their educa- 
tion. 


Guthrie-Eddie 

HANSEN - Kevin L. and Anne 
Guthrie of Hansen announce the 
engagement of their daughter, 
Megan -Jo Guthrie, to Cameron' 
Eddie, son of Jerry tmd Sheri 
Eddie of PocatcDo. 

GuihHc is a graduate of Twin 
'"Falls'Hlgh’ Sehoorand’ Snow ~ 
College. She Is currently attend- • 
Ing Idaho State University , 
majoring in family studies. Site is 
-jomplovotLat-ZCMI-in-Pocatello — 
as a bndal consultant. 

Eddie graduated from 
Highland High School and seized 
a mission in the. Florida Eort _ .. 
Lauderdale Mission. He is 
attending ISU, majoring in busi- 
ness mariccting,~and Is employed 
by American Heritage Cabinets 
_inPocateIIo.. 


Spi^er-Warth 

PAUL - Trent Spreier and 
Debbie Spreier, both of Paul, 
announce the engagement of 
their doughtcr, Ntwole Spreier, 
to Chris Worth, son of Phillip and 
Karla Worth of Paul. 

Spreier is a 1999 graduate of 
Minico High School in Rupert 
and will attend the College of' 
Southern -Idaho this fall. She is 
-employed-by-JrGi-Penney’s in- 
Twin Falls: 

Worth is a 1998 graduate of 
Minico High School in Rupert 
and will attend CSI this foil. He is 
employed by Smith’s In Burley. 

The wedding is planned for 



Nkhela Spreier iuid Chris Warth 


Fridoy at the Sweetheart Manor 
in Burley. 


Falls announce the enc agement 
ol their daughter, Jiircl 
Skabronski, to Jerod Sweesy, son 
of Gil Sweesy of Burley and 
— Sharon-Sweesy of Wildomarer 
Calif. 

.Skabronski is a graduatc of 
Gooding High School, Carroll 
College in Helena, Mom., and 
Gonzaga University School of 
Law in Spokane, Wash. She is 
employed at the Twin Falls 
County Prosecutor’s Office. 

Sweesy is a graduate of Buhl 
High School and the College of 
Southern Idalio. He is employed 

. Todd-Billman 

-KIMBERLY-=-SuirTodd-Df- 
— Boisr"and*! 

Kimberly announce their engage- 
ment. 

Todd is the daughter of Elton 
and Billie WinsRic ol Little 
Meadows, Pa., and is a graduate 
of James Madison University in 
' Virginia. She is employed at 
Novartis Seed Company in Bbi^. 

Billman isjhc son of joe and - 
Alice Billmdn of San Antonio, 
Texas, and is a graduate of 
Oklahoma State University. He is 
employed at the_Rock Creek . 
Restaurant in Twin Falls and is a 
freelance ardst. .. _ . 

The wedding is planned for 

Gunnell-Osen . 

KIMBERLY - Kip and Julie 
Gunnell of Kimbcrry announce 

• tiic engagement of-Uidir daugh-’ 
.ter, .Amanda. GiuincU,.to.Jat(a. . 
Osen, son of Roger Osen and. 
Patti Osen, both or Kimberly. 

Gunnell is a 1999 graduate of. 
Kimberly High Sch ool and will 
“^■"a'rtonBmg^dafid''^ 
University, majoring in.dcntal_ 
hygiene. She -is currently 
employed at Petro 2 in Jerome. 

OsenJs.’a-1997 graduate.of— 

Kimbcrly High School and has 
attended the College of Southern 
Idaho and ISU, where he will 
major in radiology. He is curre m- 
ly employed ot 'Petro 2 in 
Jerome. - • 

Moore-Schlund 

' TWIN FALLS — Doug- and 
Tamie Moore of Twin Falls 
r - announce th e e n gagemanr-oi 
their daughter, April Lynn 
Moore, to Jason Todd Schlund, 
son of Jim and Carol Schlund of 

• Jerome: 

Moore Is a graduate of Twin 
' Falls High School and has 

ati.CJwl«L_ihe_j:oJlege. „oL 

Southern Idaho. She is employed 
by Magic Valley Regional 
Medical Center as a patient 
financial representative. 

Schlund is tr graduate of 
Jerome High School and CSI. He 
is cmplt^ed by Metcalf Electric 



Jill Skabronski and Jerod Swoosy 
by tlie Idaho State Police in Twin 
Falls. 

The wedding is planned for 
Aug. 20. 


Blaine Billman and Sue Todd 

Sent. 10 at the Pike Mountain 
lookout with'a reception follow- 
ing at Ma^c Mountain Lodge. 

’Ihc couple will reside in ^isc. 



-—AmanSa'GdAnotrand'Jako'Osen 

__The4¥cddingJs.plamictLfot_ 

Aug. 14 at the Kimberly LDS 

Stake Center . A reception In 

their honor will follow the cere- . 
mony. • 



Jason ScManil mt April Moore 
In Twin Foils. ' 

The wedding is planned for 
Aug. 14. ' 











M TlmofrWtwi . Twin F tllt, Idiho Sund«y, Aa^ 1. 1999 NS ' 


Serving the Northside 


-Je^Gm^tzibraiy summer reading 
program charts record success 


JEROME - The Jerome Public 
Library su mmer readin g nroernm 

— “cndcdnvlTtmwards"anrf‘irhof“doc 

•• -hmeh.- — — • - 

- - The reading program starled'jurte 6 
was held every Tlmrsday and included 
vnnous activities. 

...Xfjo library nRiiouiiccd die top read- 
ers for the reading program. 

Top prize winners for the self-reader 
program for grades 1-6, were Alexa 
Carlson, Skylar Drennan, Ridge Karr, 

Jake Swift, Dorothy Lopez, and Leia 
Weatherford. Top readers for the 
Read-To-Me program for pre-sdioolcrs 
were.Rhys Karr, Robin Karr, ^lysha 
..Weatherford, Cassidy Weatherford 
^Nathanael Johnson and Tyson Olsen. 

Reading . program organizers report 

cd a record year for the summer read 
:ing program with 179 children signed 
up, 121 children receiving certificates 
for being active in the programr and 
1,774 1'eading hours reported by,parti 
pants. All that added up to a succc.s.s, 
organizers sji>[. 

“We have invested in the progn 
and it lias worked," says Xenia 
Williams, president of the Friends of 
the Library organization. 

Reading program volunteers includ- 
ed Karen M.yshalt, Laura Marshall, 

Lupe Aguilar, Nicole Siegers, Xenia 
Williams, Daralynn Crozier, Carolyn 
•Weigle, Lynn Olsen and the Friends of Stt 
the Library. Several area business also chi 
, .donated money or prizes. u.. 



Olympics coach and Wortd Games Coach Terry 

BriUadatumftatstteSptdal Olyraplcs World Games held In North Carolina. Torrez won two 
BifUa»^lrrcydIn£-orM In the lOX time trial and one In the lOK road race. He also placed 
Saidlii lit tftc9C road laca. Special Olympics are cajllng for more volunteers to help the young 


Special Olympics calls for 
Yolunteers-to get in game 


staff members and volunteers from the Jerome Public Ubraiy help ptBpvaaSBddhclIffliflt to 
children June 22 at the end of the summer raatUng program. 
ber of participants. 


TrwUf F A LLS - Organizers of the 
Sgrohfl Olympics anr looking for people 
BK special athletes and horses to 


COVLMUNriT EVENTS 


Junior Club of Twin. Falls sponsors 
12th Annual Bite of Twin Falls 


I 


I . TWIN FALLS - The Junior Club of 
Twin Falls will spon.»r the 12th Annual 
I Bite of Twin Falls from S- 9 p.m. on 
Wednesday at-the Twin Falls City Park. • • 

• Samples from some of Twin Falls’ 

finest restaurants will be available with 

proccodsjoJ rcncfitjhe.Twin FnlUXolifi; M.lhmtrl will tw. 

Department’s K-9 Division and cd. Several vocal sdec- 

Volunteers Against Violence, organizers unjy Cnuder ‘ions will be presemed 
I • s^y- from oneras nn d 

t Formorc-lTtfornrntlonT^ail-A'nna Broiidwayimlsichls. ^ 

' Schol.es at 7334268. '' ’ • • •• • 


a Beethoven sonata. 
“Dohnanyi Rhapsody" 
0 Prokofieff sonata, and 
a -set by William 
Schuman. Duo piano 
arrangements with Erin 
Tutty from “Porgy and 
Bess," by Gershwin, 
and "Brazileira," by 


nccdORS between die h i mu iTiff W amfl itfVi*. 
environment, on 33ec. -4 .an idie ElMuimi 
Lodge. The day-lcmg pro grjuu wMI bie 
free to the public find i«ill ihn’uhiespKud;- 
ers ' Roderick Xntdi. ano&ur a£ 
"WildetDess nnd die Aznehuam JdEmd.* 
former Governor Goca!l Axtdmts. 
Patrick Shea, deputy JtBsitainn S aai e ttuiy 
of the US. Deparemem <af idte Qznesntn. 


SevecaH of the SCagic Valley Special 
OCymptans: huve expressed an interest 
09 enaxpec^ in etpiestzian events at the 
— fa£S-Spgttial! Ofyinpies-Sca te-G ames.- 
ILocaC teams- are looldhg for people who 
caiin: ho rs es that can handle novice 
cnfiers,. Horses should be gentle enough ' 
feccfitrrfren and preferably experienced 
an cquesoian events. Special Olympics 
Ibud^also'say they aim would need to 
pract ii ae wuh these horses weekly. 

Vohifflsecsarejdso neededto instruct 
OC?mpians- ttn btm: horsemanship, and. 
prepare equestrians for comped* 


former chair, is the prerjciei dwcgBTTT <zi 
the forum. 


voBmeetess. ia the Wood River Volley, 
Rnperc,. aed Gooding uebs to act as 


ed. If you have a horse that you would 
be willing to provide to a Special 
Olympian or if you ore interested in vol- 
unteering in this or any Special 
Olympics project, call Kathy Williams in 
the Area S' office at 732-5467.' 

Spcdol Olympics is a nonprofit orga- 
- nization whosc-missloiFls tOTirovide"" 
year-round sports training and athletic 
■ competition in a variety of Olympic-type 
sports for people 8 years and older with 
mental handicaps. Competition in the 
gomes gives athletes continuing oppor- 
tunities to develop physical fitnc.ss, 
demonstrate courage, and experience 
Joy, the organization says. Athletes also 
panidpatc in a sharing of gifts, skills, 
and friendship with their families, other 
Special Olympics athletes, and the com- 

-fflunityrorgumcerxSay: ^ 

Training and equipment for training • 
is provided at no cost to the athlete or 


Red.Cross.Sawtooth Chapter 

offers first aid, CPR classes 

. 1 TWIN FALLS - The American }\cd 
ICross is offering first aid, cardiopul- 
Imomiry resuscitation and rectification 
;cla.ues this month. 

' • Hie classes include: 

2j a six nnd one-half hour day class In 
' standard first aid, covering adult CPR 
and first aid, is scheduled a< 9 a.m. 
Saturday. A night dasti in standard finii 
aid is scheduled ui 6 p.m, Aug. 23 and 
Aug. 24. 

U A nine-liuur community first-aid dass 
.•cring-infantrchild.-and-adulrCPR- 
J^nTTild^U-&e~ B t-g~p7m7Wdrida'y~ 
. i and Tuesday nights, 
y A nine-hour day dass in community 


Crozier graduated with honors from 
Jerome High School. She is the redpient 

oLnuinetous.awaeds.tcom.th&4daho- 

^ Music Teachers As-soetHtion’s ^riam and 
Composer Competitions and the Music 
Educator's National Conference. Crenjer 
also received sdiolarships from the Twin 
Foils Music Club. 

Crozier will be majoring in music at 
Ricks College in the Fall. 


c^maO at cTcteimmai^ 

Park Service annoonce 


Moehes for aewly forming All coaching is provided on a volun- 
apeaM Olympjctrai^ . tecr basis by members of the communi- 

Tcannae and support will be provid* ty. ^ 


HAGERMAN — RAngers fmran nfti*- 
Hagermaa Fosnl SnBt 


Monumem will be Ihiniine ^ jmWrrWi 
rlcs'progrjuo for children «z H r 
Saturday at the Visauff Ccaiacs- sa 


Focus ON PEOPLE 


the Fall. Ha german, across from ra» pi-H^ i»n 

School on ^gbway 30. 

Twin Falls student presents ' program hrags fosdls m> SSe wii& 

piano, voice recital Tuesday ' if. 

TWIN FALLS - Erin Tutty, daughter of fish. The pro g ram jcjihfnfti rTn^ iK tvTtriiCTt^ , 
Collette Tuny of Twin Foils, will present and will tefreecifchiirse. 

0 .senior recital in pioiio and voice at 7 '. AUchildn3iarew«ilrame.bto(ibesnBk 

p m Tii..cvi-» y nt v..ith asks that an adiih occang iaini- rfftriliRwr 
Jorgensen’s- ReciiMl / . — — —— — 


Beflerae Student wins place 
on deaifs Kst at Coforado State 

KatpeBtandien Yager of Bellevue was 
name d co< the spring 1999 College of 
Agmulzural Sciences dean’s list at 
CoDacadb- State University in Fort 
CoQEBS»Galb.. 

Audens, muse nxaintaih a grade point 
anecageof 3;8 or better m be eligible for 
' the College of Agricultural Sdences 
-dkanflj-Sst-^ 


Academy. 

The All-American Scholar Award 
Prognun offers recognition to students 
who excel in the academic disdplincs, ' 
coordinators say. Students much main- 
tain a 33 grade point average or bciicr, 
and receive recommendation from a 
teacher, coach, counselor, or other qud- 
ified source to be eli^blc for the award, 
coordinators say. 


p A .six and a half-hour standutd first aid 
•[ course will be nt 6:30 p.m.'ort Aug. fS 
' and Aug. 19 at llie Red Cross office in 

Hailey. ... 

4 CI’R and first aid review classes are 
offered every Tuesday at 9 a.m. and 
Friday at 1 p.m. An evening review dass 
is also sdiedulcd for Aug. 19 at 6:30 p.m. 

. To register for a dass, please send a 
dicck for the course fee with the date of 
-the -class-.you. wish -to attend. 
Prercgisiration and pre-payment is 
required for all dassc.s. The American 
Red Cross accepts credit cards. 

: fpf more information, call the Red 


733-6464 or 1-888-367-6321, 


Hall. 

Tutty studied piano 
for eight years with ' 


mix unu voice 
for three years with 
Sharon Warner. 

Her solo piano reper- 
toire >vill iiidudc Badi,' 
Turina and Lecuona, as 
■ well as the duo piano 

EnnTutty arrangements 'with 

Lindy Crozier. Vocal 
selections will include songs' by 
Schubert, Ty.son and Sondheim. . 

She graduated as valedictorian from 
die Twin Falls Christian Academy. She 
has received numerous awards from the 
Music Teachers National A.ssodation at 
the state and regional level.s, was award- 
ed summer camp-scholarships from the' 


adds new locatkn at inaai 

TWIN FALLS — TTbe Twnai FiElb: 
FArzner'E Market b&s added a wn - mfl 
location in from of die ibopt as 
VaDey Mall. 

Fresh locoUy-grcnra -yegtniitilcs, bcs&&. 
flowers, specialty f oo^ and <azi£zE wiDl be 
for sale from 5 pan. zo 7 pen. Tmeidzgr 
evenings during August zmdSeptaoieKs:. 

The main locmian >af die Twitn FdBs 
Farmer’s Market, in front die Gmsni^ 
Outlet and Kznm -on Addison Aw. is . 
open 9 azn. to 1 p-tn.^ar itrrlim tn i vfn i t ft i 
Oaobcr23. 


KefictanD residents earn 
annis at Wfdtman College 


PeoS .Sheftop, daughter of Gary K. 
and ILitRerine M Shelton, and Katie 
VfHboa,. daughter of David and Triah 
WcIbocE. all! of Eecchum, have. won. . 
Seftnfar Athlece honors at Whitman 
CofTitge- in WaHa Walld, Wash., for the 


- Natlonat^Sdclefy-dTCoIle^afe 

Scholars Includes local student 

Jodi Hettingo, daughter of Kurt and 


SRirfwni and Wilson, both freshman 
smrfiBTP ac Whitman, are membra of 
dhe WRinnait women’s alpine sld team, 
and are 1S9B graduates cd Wood River 


Statfimt athletes must maintain a 3.5 


membership into the National Society 
of CoUegiate Scholars. 

Hctdnga, a 1998 graduate of Jerome 
High School, will be honored during a 
campus ceremony- this fall at the 
' University of Southern California. 

The National Society of Collegiate 
Scholars is a national non-profit honors 
organization thar.rccogmzus first and 
second year students who excel academ- 
ically, organizers say. 


;topT)y‘i}ie American Red Cross office at -.Lionel Hampton School of Music, and 


J'lS Shoshone St. E in Twin Falls. 


La Leche League of Magic 
Valley announces meeting 


won scholarships from the Twin Falls 
Music Club. Tutty won competitions with 
Music Educators National Conferenced 
Tutty plans to major in music, and 
minor in theater arts at the College of 


Veterans assistan c e avaiaUe 
throughout VsBes 

Job. Service r^prcBeznAiire ELtiy 


receive a fiivonlblie recommendation 
- fema iihe cn a ch i n gsaff tube eligible for 
^emward. 


Applewhite vdO assia wtsenmE an aewor- 
al Magic Valley area Hocaiioits 
month. 


Jefone indent Ben wlhs 
MMaKricaa Seto^ Award 

Kinberly- BeH, daughter of jiidy 
BoUcoa of J'erome, earned an All- . 


Hollister resident receives 
degree from Cornell College ■ 

Kelly Thornberg of Hollister was 
awarded a bachelor’s of special studies 
degree, with a double major in politics 
and women’s studies on May 22 ot 
Cornell College in Mount Vernon, Iowa. 

Thornberg graduated cum laude and 
is a member-of the Pi Sigma Alpha - 


of the Magic Valley wjU hold a meeting 
at 10 a.m. 'Aug. 12 at the KMVT 
Community Room located at 1100 Blue 
Lukes Blvd. N, between Pole Line and 

-=FalIs-Ave. — 

. Tlic meeting will feature discussion on 
j’Baby’s Changing Needs.” 
t Lu Leche meetings feature informa- 
lion 'oiT breast-feeding arid mothering 
Jrom the experience of other nursing 
jnothers. , - 

For more information, call Holly at 
5'33-2133 QJLHeather at 735-1497. 

' Participants are asked to park and 
enter on the northside of the buil ding. 


College in Spokane. 


Valley House requests bird . 
Jiouse.dQnattans.&ULfuntFfaIser__ 

TWIN FALLS - Valley House, Magic 
Volley's nonprofit luRnclcss-siidter,-is- 
' requesting donations of bird liouscs for a 
"fund-raiser at their open liousc om^pt.- 
14. at 507 Addison' Avc., and at the 
Thousand Springs Nature Conservancy 
Festival Sept. 25-26. 

For more information, call 734-7736. 


Twin Fails resident performs 
her senior reclta[Monday ^ 

TWIN FALLS - Lindy Crozier, daugh- 
tec of Ron and Karen Cnmerof Jerome, _ 
ivtJHjrejcnt her senior redtal in-piano 
Suiovracc at 7:30 pJiL Monday at Keith 

jJorgensen'sRedtalltiJL ; .- — - 

• Crazier has studied piano with Barbara 
for seven years and voice for three 
^ors with Sharon Warner, 
r Her solo piano repenoire will include 


-Environmental Resource ^ 

.Center of; Ketchum wins ^nt 

KETCHUM - The EnvironmenTol 
Resource Center, located in Ketchum at 
Lcadvilic and 6tii Streets, .was owarded 
an Idaho Humnnitics'Council gram in 
the amount of $4,890. 

The grant will be used by the Resource 
Center to inougurate a ftniim’of annual 
lectures and dialogue, entitled, “The 
Frank Church'Lccturcs on Wilderness 
and the American Mind.” 

The first forum will addrra the con- 


■“locations: 

□ Pron-9 zi.TTi, zo 2 pan. sdie &xa 
third Wednesdays a Goodme Qov' 

_ HaU. ■ . 

*4 From 9 aariT to'^'pznrKfaier-iidddBflatid . 

^ fqurmJWednesdays ai Laaosiai 

County Co uith u us e’inSboianine. 

□ Fro m 9 a im, zo noon gw^- TraTTTr«tfliy :Wi 
Room 219 aftiicMeyeriiutfierSzBlStig 
at the CoUqge -of Soulieizi aiRwvws m 
T win Falls. 

3 FrbmS aan."ioTp!m'!die tdnrd MonBi^ 
at the .'Mini^assia Outinbes' of . 
— - CdmmdreiaRiQXinc.— • — — 

□ From 9 ami. u> 3 pjn. ibe foxBUfti 
. . Tuesday at tile Ulstiontil Guard Abbbedj;- 

in Burley. 

Services inrhide :itfQrkin ^ iaijtrit ii r j rftt 
referrals; veidimui' «dncaticzB wT r Vurmg 
and other progiam s;' TocazzamU 
ance; and id canmnnBtF&iatd 


^ gfi rite ty Government studies scholarly achievement in the political 
&emi t&e United Scares Achievement sdence field.' 


Wewant 

Sr -g 


your news 

•- j 



^^1 

JH 


Coanrily Ediar 
PtiMaonMo 
RwTIrnMMw'i 
PAB0XS48 
TWtaMi.ldrtn ‘ 


- . JoeyBiyant 
rsatiptutoftK 
YowMnKMrti 


of the above locations or at Mzgn 

Valley Job Sraice Office, 771 K. GtiDcme 
Road. . ^ 


ioejrftyait 
-TlwTlBI M W M f l 
33SV2EflKiStN. 
Birin, UitoS331£ — : 
677-4^ 


Fsc6774S43or73ie38 

EnBirpatmOnn^evaBey^ 







&Bdfr.Aa 9 »t 1.1999 Thne»^(p««. Tvfei Faflt. idtfn M 


Family Life 


Anniversaries 


The Brysons 

TWIN FALLS - Mr. and Mrs. 
Arnold Biyson of Tvrin Falls will 
be honored at an open house 
Thursday for their 60th wdding 

anniversary. — 

Friends arid relatives arc invit- 

— ed-to-caU'from-6:30'tO'9'pjnrar 

the LDS Church, 824 Caswell 
Ave. W. in Twin Falls. 

Bryson a nd Rut h Hi.itr w « 


married July 24. 1939. in Paul, 
r TheirTnarriffge was'l;»cr~s Ai»m.' 
' liizca in the Idaho Falls LDS 
Temple. 

They lived it? Paul until 1949 
when he went into the Nav y m 



servcTH World War II. As a mas- 
ter mechanic, he served in the 
South Pacific, Adimiralty Islands, 
where he was a motor machinist 
mate second class. He over- 
hauled and tested boat motors 
that were sent to the war zone in 
the Philippines. He returned 
home in January 2946, and they 
later moved to KeUogg, where he 
' wrked in the ihachinc'^dp at'' 
the Bunker Hill Smelter. They 
moved to Twin Falls in 1959 and 
he went to work for the city of 
Twin Falls Parks Department. He 
retired as superintendent’of 
Parks and Recreation in July 
1983. 


The Meiers 

BUHL - Mr. and Mrs. Earl K. 
Meier of Buhl will be honored at 
a open house Saturday or their 
50th wedding anniversary. - 
Friends and relatives arc invit- 
ed to call from 1 to 3 pan. at St. 

~ John|s Lutheran Church in Buhl. 
Meier and Lclah Sisson were 

^married Au£. 7. 1949.iaBuhL 

- They live in Buhl. ■ " 

He worked at Andy and Bob’s 
Motor Co., Thiemann Milk 
Hauling and Pet Milk Co. 

She worked at Green Giant 
and Lamb Weston. 

The event is-bcing given by 
their children, Carol L Carlilc of 
Twin Falls, Steven Meier of Boise 


Arnold axl Rsth Bryson 

She worked at various jobs 
during that time feuding cleilc- 
— ing — and — cashier — at — ^J J.— 
■ Newberry’s and several years at 
Idaho Frozen Foods. Her favtsite 
occupation was being a wife, 
mother, grandmother and home- 
maker. 

They have held many positions 
in the LDS Church and served a - 
mission in the Louisiana Baton 
Rouge ^Cssion. 

The couple has 

dren, Doran (Susan) Bryson of 
Austin, Texas, Michael (Dena) 
Bryson of ClinVon, Utah. Tunoihy 
(Alana) Bryson of Flagstaff, 
Ariz., and Laurie Bryson of Twin 
Falls. 

They have 14 grandchildren 
and live greaPglandchildretL 


TirE Hopwoods 

BUHL - Dale and Alice. 
-Ilopwood of Bobl will cele- 
brate their 65tfa wedding 
anruvcisaiy Ac^ 8 aa the CiAl 
Cztyi^rk. 

^^nmds and relaitves.are, 

pnLt faring a scrrice 

and laws chairs. Cake and 
punch w 
4pjn.. 

Ho gifts. pHeasc- — 


JHlEBLiCKS. 



HU.VT - Mr. and Mrs. Karl 
Blade nrlrhra ted thesr 3Dih wed- 
ding anniversary on July 30. 
They were bopo r e d Jtdy 31 at a 
family dinner in Springville. 
Utah. 

Bladic and Baflcy were 

married July 30. 1919. in Son. 
Her. Tbesr m arriag e was later 
tnltamijwlia theLDSTcavleia- 
S^LakeCity. 

I l f iM 

area, and hare resided there for 
50 years. 

He was pan owno' of the Twin 
Falls ttii ei r\> tc rVJt> p ^ jTwt SOS 
employ^ by the College of 
Southern Idaho omil fazs retxie- 
menttnl99L 


bocnemaker. 9ie was al» a «et- 
uDteer ax Ma^ VaDey Msxurial 

Since rechemefii. they spend 
the wiiner xDoads hi Sc George; 
Utah. 

Tliey are acrire OMmbers in 
th^ iTi^ o i nn 'll and hare 


. Eari and LeUk Meier - 

and David Mdcr of Twiri Falls. 

The couple has onfr grand- 
daughter, three step grandchil- 
dren and one step great-grand 
daughter. 


Their children are Karlyo 
(Jim) Ritchie of Wn"* Kathy. 
TDel) Sutler of PocateUo.'Pai 
(D ar w in ) Bnming of \fis^ 
(Kris) Black and Kris (Ralph) 
Caldo; an of SfriagtiDe. U^L 



Personal preferences 
mix into weddings , 


The couple has 20 grandchil- 


-The Kunsmans— 

JEROME - Bob and Shirley 
— Kuneman-wili-be-honored-ai-an — 
open house Aug. 8 for their 50th 
wedding anniversary. 

Friends, neighbors and rela- 
• tivosBrelnvltedto'call'frowrTlir — 
6 pjn. QC their home, 216 E 450 S ' 
.in Jerome. Bring car^ photos or 
written memories to snore for a' 
senp book 

The couple met in Gardena, 
Calif., in 1M9. and were married 
Aug. 6, 1949, in Los Vegas, Ncv. 

They have lived in Murtaugh, 
Hansen, Filer and Twin Falls. 

They both worked for the 
Gallatin Volley Seed Company 
and Rogers Brothers seed 
Company for many years. He 
worked for 25 and onc-holf years, 

and she worked for 33 and one- 

-lialT^ 



.TUe Bodilyb 

JEROME - Mr. and Mrs.' 

Bo£ly cf Jame w21 czt 
ebraii their 50th wedding 


a job of 38 y ear s. He worked for 
Biyaa Harris Jr. of Hansen as an 


Knight Rldder Hews Senrlce 

The occLsion: Prince Edward's 
.Juae..T9-wcdding^Thc place: 
Windsor Castle. TTic big newsF 
the choice of wedding gown for 
bride Sophic.Rhys-Jones? 

— .Nor really. The true news 
flash: Prince Edward designed 

— —" the royal bride's necklace and 
earrings' us well os the outfits for 
Che children in the wedding 
party. In fact, the 35-ycar-old 

prince- rcpwrediyTlcTperwith 

wedding details large and small. 
He represents an ever-growing 
trend of grooms who help plan 
cvery-thing from the guest lik to 
what kind of frosting tops the 
wedding cake. 

As we round out the matrimo- 
nial month of June, here’s a list 
of wedding trends from expert 
. -Carley Rorey and the latest mag- . 
azt&s and books: 

Move over brides. “The 
groom, and sometimes his par- 
. ents, are more involved in the . 
planning and organization than 
ever before," writes Peggy Post 
in the newly revised book, 

' “Emily Post’s Weddings" 
(HorpcrPcrrenial). “Happily, the 
old saying, 'A man never Iroows 
bow unimportant he is until he. 
attends his own wedding,’ has 
mostly fallen by the waysidk" 
Roney, co-founder and editor- 
in-chief of the wedding Web site . 

- www.thdowccom - agrees. 
“Twenty percent of our audi- 
ence is male," Roney says. 
fCrooms do a sgnificant amount 
of the planning now. It used to be 

. they were involved with things 
like selection of the music, but 
now 1 find grocxns arc more into 
things like catering, they're 
heavily involved in the selection 
of the wedding and reception 
locations and all the alcohol- 
related issues of the wedding. 
They’re also getting more 
involved in the-registeriitg of the - 
gifts." 

• Destination weddings. More 


r another 


SMileymlBobK 
their lives acres south of Jerome. 

The couple has three children, 
Linda (Dave) Orr of Hazelion, 
Don (Barbara) Kunsman of 
Phoenix, Ariz, and Ron Kunsman 
of Nampa. 


Bodily and Hela ABea were 

Los3° UDSTeagde. 

He » froQ Prescoa and sbe is 
from Core, Uah. They mov e d 
~arottad a-few~yg» r g before set- ' 
Tiinf tntn tVM sfir VifkT ' — — 
vnwked saose yeans, bet 


TlffiV.AUGHNS 

JEROME - Mr. and Mrs. 
Thomas M. Vas^xn of Jerome 
win be honored at an open boose 
Saturday for SOefa wedefing 


They have six children. Grant 
(Krista) of Pocatello, Alan of 

CaldweU, Diane Todd (Rick) of 
Bohl. Terry and Jerry, both of 
Jeramee X 

----Tbtf couple bas-19 granddiil-- 
-'dren and Kve grear-grandchit- 


ried, like an island o 
, dty." _ . . . 

• Wedding us art. Bride’s maga- 
__zinc_ reports more couples arc 
luldng chances when it comes to 
wedding photography. Thanks to 
technology, such as faster film 
speeds and quieter motor drives, 
wedding photographers can more 
casil)' Insinuate themselves into ~ 
great shots. 

“But this style of wedding pho- 
tography would never have tidcen 
off without help front two'culiiir.'^ 
al forces: a growing mainstream 
appreciation for black-and-white 
photography, a hallnjark of this 
style, and a critical mass of visu- 
ally sophisticated couples who 
have cut their teeth on MTV and 
ads for. Calvin Klein and The 
Gap," the magazine reports in its 
August/Sepicmbcr issue. 

• Heritage-inspired weddiagf 

are hot. In Sally Kilbridge and 
Mallory Samson's bcst-selling 
book, “Real Weddings: A 
CclcbratioQ.of Personal Style" 
(Clarkson Potter), an entire sec- 
tion is dedicated to heritage- 
inspired wcdding.s. The book doc- 
. umems brides and grooms who 
incorporated African, Scottish 
and Mexican traditions into their 
wedding ceremonies. 

“Wed^ngs arc beepming less 
cookie-cutter affairs and more 
personal," Roney says. 
“Pcrsonalimtion of vriiddings is a 
big trend. People want their wed- 
dings to stand out from the 
CTOWd." 

- - • Adve n t ure honeymoons. In 
RonCy’s book, “The Knot’s 
Complete Guide to Weddings in 
the Real World” (Broadway ' 
Books), she includes infonnadon 
on now-popular adventure-style 
honeymoons, such as biking in 
Ireland, sea kayaking in 
' Vancouver, skiing in Sun Valley 
and diving in Cozumel 
“People arc looking for combi- 
nations of active as w^ as relax- ’ 
ing honeymoons," Roney says. 

„ . . • Second weddings aren't at 

-CTuple s ar e flyin ^offto-pla c e s city hall-anyroere.-Ron^-says 

like Hawaii or Venice 10 marry. more and more couples want 

“Destination wedding are one weddings; no matter how many 
if th a Hi'ca a rr tremii right nn wjl . . oimes the bcide.oc.gxoom_bas 
Roney says. “Couples don't walked down the aisle; 

always live where th^ grew up, “Second weddings are no 
yd^^l^l^the pannm lo^er quiet, embarrassed 

Oftecitimesi'c'ouples'now are as big and celebratory as the 
..picking another jl^.to.get mat. firs t." 


They are presently redred oh and two grcat-granddiildren. 


Friends and rria a ii es are mrit- 
ed to call from 2 to 5 pzn. ax 324 
Fifth Are. E in Jeme. 

Vau^m airi Lois Neshix were 
— nafried-oo^uft.-?.— 1949.- ia 


T h e Heaths — 

KIMBERLY - Mr. and Mrs. 

Clarence (Tat) Heath will be hon- 
ored ot an open house Saturday 
for their 65th wedding anniver- 
sary. 

Friends and rdadves ore invit- 
ed to attend from 1 to 4 pm. at 
the. couple's home on Falls 
Avenue E.,'3372 E. 4000 N. in 
Kimberly. 

Heath and ireda Staley were 
married AUg. 9, 1934, in Twin 
Falls. Their marriage was solem- 
nized in the Salt Lake Temple on 
Sept. 26, 1934. 

All their married life they 
lived, farmed and milked cows 
while raising their seven chil- 
dren. He also worked for 
Amalgamated Sugar Co. for sev- 
eral winters.. , 

Through the years, the couple 
~~hfiinii6ia'manyTioslttons-itt-the- 
LDS church. After retiring, they 
served, a mission to the Iowa De 
Moines Misstoru 
The event is being given by 
their children,' Laura'- (Bill) - 

Reeves ofKimbcrly,-Elaina(Bob) yaneouv er„ . Wa s h ., Je rt ,( J i 

Cunnin^am of Glenns Ferry, Heath of Shoshone and-De: 
Eddy ^ynda): Heath of Amboy, (Karla) Heathtrf Cambridge. 

Wash., Jerry (Carol) Heath of •The couple has 24 gtanddiil- 
Kimberly, Patty (Mike) Pope of dren and 4,7 great-g ran d di Dd r en. 



They have tired in Ririifield, 
Wendell and now' reside in 
Jerome. 


The event is oeing girea of 

th^r Tom V a w g lin nf 

San Diego, Calif^ and Joni 
Vao^p- r o oel l ci P o ^e Pa 


-TheGorrells 


GOODING - Alrin and Vena 
(kriiell of Goofng wiB'eririaw 
th^ir 50th wedifing 
on Aug. 9. 

The Gaenfis are loogtiBK res»- 


Fiiendsand 

orstapbydxir: 



Subscribe today. Call 733“0931 or 677-4042 for home delivery. 


WEDDIWB DRESSES 


Mdesmald&'CnilsaOnsm . 

Party style 8 C&jlnceswas 

Shoes - Veils • nowemlri Dresses 

— Gloves - Strapless Bras-Sllps- 

Tablos - Chairs - Artrios - Backdrops 

WHinmatHBiTAlSHljP 

W 733-8838 kS 

sm OTF m ui. nviTATiaia 


aiO South Mstn-Twln Polls. 


Why settle for 2ND aEST 

WHEN; THE B£STlS HERE AT 



itfllNUTE- 

PHOTO 



Lynwood Shopping Center • 1341 Filer Atc. E. • 733-1S59- 


Miagic Valley Wedding 
Planning Directory 

A xvedding is on^of the single most important 
events in a person's li^e...thc fallowing businesses 
can help make it a memorable occasion. 


M mSumiLl-.S BH KMH 


Thci»cn 3(ocor» 

701 Main .Ave. E. 
ImnPalb 


)\VUHS 


PetR feiAkvw 
H orae Linceric Shows & 
BrtJal Showers 
Filer 326-47S6 


LL.lBorTBR/Oi:.S" 


C aadfatick Park 
‘36 2nd .Ave. North 
. Twin Fills 734-5444 


!53W.Wain 
Jerume 524-7238 
Hoaotyle Krcet & 
locemDeamtD Chair & Table 
CatefStfC 6c Rentals 

TtrarfilH 735:0921 

I l^icown.Bban 
17 Main Avc. E. 

T*m Bills 733-0 900 . 

Weston P b a 

B>0‘BESXaE^vi£ 


Hne Fuminirc 
2338 CK -crlinJ Ave. 


Burlc>’ 




Marilyn Mills 

Tnnsfomutioos Unlimited 

537 Main Avc. E 
Twin Falb 734-8360 

Hudson’s Shoes 
148 Main ;^vc. S 
Twin Bills 733-4750 
1239 Filer Ave 
Twin Bills 733-6280 ' 


if()\/:V.\|(K)\// K’.WM. 


Four Ways Travd 



Pomcfclle Portrait D^ign Studios 
119 2nd Avc. West 
Twin Falb 734-9969 

616 Commercial St. 
ako,NV 753-0929 


Bnt AdvMiagc Mdrtjpge 
700 S. Lincoln, Suite C 
Jerome ' 324-7757 




Milletulium Productions 

308 Shoshone St. E, Stc. 4 
Twin Falb 735-9987 


Every Blooming Thing 
266 Blue Lakes Blvd. 
TriiiB^b 733-8322 


• < 'KM ■!. 

'-U.\.K' 1 

i; 



Hwt's Tux and Gennas 
— 1301 Filer Are E. - ' 

Tw^ Bills 734-8393 

Tuxedos Nott & Gowns Forever 

Niae kVanerM all 

TwiBilb “734-4055 
Swext h ej tt Manor 
(JrczLinil & 42nd Sc. • 

BurW ' 678-8692 

Phone 733-0931. e 


Twin Falb 734-7805 

Boyer jewelry ' 

1838-Add bori-AvCrE: ; 

Twin Falb 733-4552. 

: 153 Main Avc. W. 
TwinBiIb 734-5554 


s/.Ui,\(, M u HIM ' 


Twin Falb Sewing Center 
157 Main Ave. W. • 
Twin Falb 733-3344 

AOetis Fboco 
105 E Main 


—Sp und works -Vidco-& — - ■ - 

Audio Productions 

818 lOthAvc.E 
Jerome 324-2593 


I \UI II II ' 


The' Bij rteyTnn 
•8(X> N. Overland Avc.' 
^'Burley . 678-3501 
Sweetheart Manor . 
Overland 6t 42nd St. 
Burley ... 678-6692 


W! Ki i I fill 


Old Townc'CotiUiaa 
- Up to270^ocia! Hall-Caterings 
Twin Falb ' 734-8995 


uf nni.vi; ki \ i u s 


Jerome 324-2486 

IGm Critdifick] Photography 
488'BIue Lakes Blvd. 

, Twin Falb 734-52^ 

It. 219, to include your 


Hommtyle Ditm & ” 

lacermountam Chair & Table 

Catering 6i Rentals . 

Twin Falb 733-6621 
buaincaa in this directory. _ 











I By Robert H. Wotfo, North Woodmero, NowYprk 


ACROSS 
1 Indian too 
C UiuAl proctico 
; II HBIorERA. o.o: 

1 5 Arab {jormonls 

19 AichrtociJonoa 

20 Rod choJcodony 

21 0«Ar:II. ^ 

22 Kodrovn ol ‘Zoitui 
mo Grook* 

23 Huabond'huntoi'B 
■' diioclory? 

20 Hdiyamokol 
27 Ftoolond 
20 O.T, lxx>k 

29 Mop book 

30 Govl. souico 

31 Uiborod 

. 33 'Silkwood* elnr 

34 Job ohilt 

3 5 1000 

30 Ydko’a Inmlly 
30 . TLC piovidor 
^1 

42 Altar at aura 

43 Chromoaome unit 
44 . Wallaeh and Lilly 
4 S' Royal roabeneoa 

48 King of Franca 

49 *TopA 2 *aumor 
so Wbeaiongf 

. 'Sumo by Ma' ' 

51 Lovaaong 

52 Currani 

54 uttaaloom 

55 Uit-anoing abbr > 

56 Mordarecl ' ' 

57 EOdiiomUa 

$6 Puppeteer Lewit ' 

60 S-oKopad 
moUinga 

C 2 Green-card org. 

03 Soccer player 
Hamm 

04 Salary dispansar 
ce Siignay aakow 
08 Agoni, bnolly 
70 Totona 

72 Brualt collociioo 

73 Appaaroncoe 

76 Pa^oa I 

70 _ Victor I 

70 Wittldsma 

80 Crtonnal-ewimmor. 1 

Gortrudo t 

81 WInnera' prliea 
83 Q-U eonnactlon 
*84 emncboa Of mood 

voaaaia 

86 Long ol *Mado In 
Amerlco’ 

87 Graen-oydd? 

68 Poneallo or ftirka . 

OB Edgalaaa aword 
90 Rural atopovor . ■ 
Bl^dom's grandaon 

02 Dlarlai Samuel 

03 Earl Biggora 

04 Loaor of Uio 'SOa 
95 Traeked to the end 

07 Zany Imogona 

08 Roman poliUcal 
aubdivialona 

100 Mr. KrUovol ' ’ 

tOl hse'e niddlo noma ' 

102 Bub I 

103 Some aporta care 

107 Bua route _ 

‘ 108 'Film'ab^l caJiB 1 
from gala? 

141 Tolklon'a Irooa ] 

Jocquoa ^ 

113 'The Joiaons' dog 

114 For font, In Kent 2 

11 5 Scottlabioch 2 

11 0 Juc t 008 Pv — 


THE Sunday Crossword 

Edited by. Wayne 'Robert Wiliianis 


Private caregiviiig can work — 
but caution is recommended 


anal 

■■III 

mam 


_ amm 

la aa 
aaa 
aamiai 


117 The ones fioio 

118 Mobondinga? 
DOWN 

1 Eatabilanoa a 

2 Loeo ono'a aolf- 

3 Miaaile afioitor 

4 Go-botwoon 
5 -Mnrtfy Ctiinoao ■■ 

disIt? • ' 

0 Formerly 
poaaaaaod 

7 Incomplolo organ 
devolppmenia 

8 Expoaod 

9 Hankering 

10 Herbal drink 

11 Lamboaios 

12 Lolflor 

^3 Cacoptioooua 

14 Lobela 
.15 Alaskan lalarx] 


10 Weal Coast town 
lor ho-mon? 

17 Ftoncn actor 

18 Aaaaasiruiied 
Egyptian ptosidoni 

24 Carl and Rob 
_2S RercopUDlo by 
— touch i 


. 32 Arxfaraon ol 
•WKRPIn 
ClndnnaO* 

34 Morchnnre 

35 Sniping jiroaa 

36 Sfiepbortfa atali 

37 Batter fonxilo 
servama? 

30 Treat o puppy, 

poftiapa ■ - — 

40 Brazen afar ol 
'Romeo and 
Juilot‘7 

41 Obvioua prolonao 

45 _ oul (dwinotos) 

46 Adam's garden 

47 Sliichoa 

51 'Night Moves' 
slngof Bob 

— 63 Fronch fnono 

54 Momoda 

56 Ciruiomon and 
nulmeg 

■'SD'Foblbun coaching 
logorxl Goorgo 

CO Singer Redding 

61 Ar my ol lomalo 

relaitvos? 

05 Christmas 
emptoyoos 
_ 67 Adversary 
-88-Momofv-tneihod 


CO Mont 

71 Greek Chriaiian 
theologian 

74 Kevin of 'Dave' 

75 ^irvi and Canary 
77 Cownrdty 

70. .Barbecue fuel 
80 Retired professors 
- 62 Hoed cover 
84 Diotors 
65 Irhporsonaidr' 

68 Brings lo mind 
02 Subiociota 


^ . OS trojan beauty 
00 Of sheep 
97 Flier 

08 _ blanche 

09 Graktret 
^101 French dertc 

102 Flxmdioapi#- 

104 UvorsocroOon 

105 Lulu - 

106 Some NCOS 

109 Used Choirs 

110 Fish eggs 



Q. My viife’s raotber, ase.83, 
was pretty self'Siiffideat nottl 
recently. When we saw lint the 
was not keeping her bosne dean 
and bejpin finding rotlen food m 
her refrigerator and on her 
shelves, we paid eyen closer 
attention and saw that she Mas 
disoriented at times. ' 

We have checked into \arious 
facilities, but she qi» stems ‘too 
well'* 10 be uprooted from her 

boiy. 

She does not have si^Incant 
medical needs, and does not 
want to be removed from the 
comfons of her home. 

We began lookixig for private 
caregivers through newspaper 
advertisements lirid'leeal ser> 
vices, but we are vesy imcnntfoci- 
- -able with what we hare secs. - 
.Since my motheryin-law is frail 
and bos difficulty doing sniny" 
household tasks, we need same- 
one to check on her regularly 
and to help her with her day-to- 
day activities a companion of 
sorts who will run errands, do 
basic hoiisckeepiDg, shopping, 
help Mom get to her regular doc- 
tor uppointmests. 

With the horror stories we 
read about private caregivers 
taking advantage of their dderiy 
. employers, we ore terrified of 
putting Mom in faana's wa>'. And 
we do not hare the m riuHt 
on her every hour of e ve r y day. 
How can we jumpstart this 
process, as we have been striking 
out so far? 

A. Since private caregiving is 
up and coming, but as of 3 m 
■ uhrc^^'l^'‘'rottage iiidusiry,’'' ' 
wc bdieve chat you are wise to 
be cautious about whom you 
hire. 

And even if you had the rim«» 
to monitor your mother-in-law’s 
dare, you might not know what to 
look for. So long as you arc able 

to fund ihc_homc care needed, _ 

there are some opoons ava^ble 
that bear considenition in your 

effo rts to ta ke prei'cntive mea- 

surcs now that will help guard 
against elder abuse of any kind 

’First, we suggest that your 
moth{^-in-Iaw be evaluated by a 
qualified geriatric care manager 
- so th at you can benchmarir your - 


Nextsteps 

Jan ColIiRS and 
JaiWtemef 

mother-in-Iaw*s current state of 
health and care needs. We also 
otggcst that your care manager 
make at least bi-weekly visits to 
check on her care. 

Id our view, when it comes to 
— hiring e caregiver or- ream of 
c ar eg i venL it is essential that 1 ) 
there be a criminal and refer- ' 
ence check of each person 
.emjd^ed, 2 ) a written record of 
the laie provided to the elderly 
person is available. 3) there are 
back-up caregivers available 
should the primary person not be 
available because of sickness or 
other irasons, and 4) the caregiv- 
er is supervised. 

In our search for resources, we 
came across a company called 
Home loacad Senior Care which 
we learned is the largest 
laovider of pornnedkal cumpan- . 
ionship and home care services 
for the elderly in the United 
States. 

We met with a r epre se ntative 
from jh^ational office and 
were imprest to findjh«jhe_ 
dder oire'^e^iarill^ems at 
Home Instead Senior Care help 
famOy members and their elder- 
ly loved ones accept the aging 
proce s s gradually and with confi- 
dence, while allowing for in'de- 
pendenceat home. 

Acting as a “second set of 
_eyesr,.Home Instead provides 
key checks and balances that can 
prevnc elder abuse in at-home 
ore situatio ns su ch as yours. 

Fira of all, enmi^ and refer- 
ence checks of all carepvers are 

W»Tvtaryt ' 

Caregivers are checked out 
ihoroughly to make sure they 
have a dem criminal record, are 
reliable, and are mistMnrthy. In - 


addition to extensive criminal 
checks,- six references are- 
required, each of whom is con- 
tacted and questioned. 

Second, each caregiver is; 
required to write down exactly 
what they did and what thcyl 
observed during each visit, and ' 
_ this informaclonJs.bcjivaiiablej 
to family members and supervi- : 
sots. 

Home Instead Senior Care 
ures a -“C lient Bind er" sy stem. 1 
“which is'Vept m the eiderljr 
client’s home. In addition to the 
ongoing log kept by the care- 
givers. the Client Binder also 
included emergency numbers 
and vital information about .the 
elderly client’s pcrsonol prcfcr- 
ences and routines. 

In this way, should ocher care- 
givers^be necessary, they will be 
infbrmb'3'drwhkt'needs to'be 
done in advance and shortens 1 
the “learning curve." 

Third, there is supervision 
through a "second set of eyes” . 
which helps ensure both safety 
and accountability. Abuse is 
much less likely to occur if some- 
one in authority is checking on 
both the client and caregiver. 

The independent local owners 
of Home Instead Senior Care ! 
provide these .“checks and bal-, ; 

' ances" by making both : 
announced and unannounced 
visits to speak with the clients 
and caregivers, review the logs, 
and observe the situation to 
make sure everything is going 
welL 

l o our view, bv thorouehlv , 
researdnng-your home core ser- 
vice and making sure these pre- 
cautions arc taken, you can 
greatly reduce the chances of 
problems with your mother-in- 
law’s care. 

More information about Home 
Instead Senior Care ebn be 
found, by. visiting their-Web sice - 
at httpyAvww.homcinsccad.com/ 
or by calling 1 (838) 484-5759. 


JanCOlliruisa writeratid editor. ■ 
Jan Warner is a matrimonial, tax 

n nrl nttn mn y fln t h ftrv \ 

based in Colurnbia, S.C. Please ‘ 
send your questions to P.O. Box' 
11704, Columbia, S.C. 29211, ore- 
■ mail to ianuKmer<^cxtstens.net. ^ 


Celebrate life’s definitive moments Sony, cicx; done can’t 

In evervone’s life there nre I t truly way He went <m to college. 1 T 

.stayed after class, and we had a . All of us have the ability to yvJLl VJ-loClL/XJlXL V 

Ai.-*i'i?t> long talk. I ipid him what 1 had influence for cood or for ilL “ • 


In everyone’s life there are 
definitive moment.s that occur,, 
and ciiese moments stay with us 
forever. \Ve never forget them. 
Tiiey may - be happy moments, 
sad moments, moments over 
which we are angry or moments 
chat embarras-s us. 

But whatever they are ihc.se 
momgnrs~change~d ur 
better or, for worse. Hopefully , 
the definitive moments of our 
lives will help us to make choices 

push us toward positive goal.s. 

I think of a definitive moment 
in my life and the life of one of 
my students. Wlicn this Ixiy came 
into my class he iitis belligerent, 
he didn’t like school, he didn’t 
like his teachers, and he was 
angry at tlic world. I had heard 
all of this about him before I ever 
saw liim, bur 1 had made it a prac- 
ticc during my years as n leadicr 
to always ^ my own judge, never 
letting others judge a child for 
me. 'Still it was with .some crepi- 



Ai-’I'er 

1 i 1 

a ASS 

1 'll i;. 

Gay Petersen 

am 



daiion Uiat I awaiii^'his arrival 
iliat first day in clns.s, 

' strange experience for 

door. Although I did not know 
him I immediately liked him. 
Wliaicvcr he had done - however 
he had acted - I knew tit that ' 
moment tliat we would get along, 
and he seemed to know it too. I 
smiled at him, and he .smiled 
hack. I told liim iliai 1 would like 
to sec him for a few minutes 
after cla.s.s that day, and he 
agreed. 

llic class filled with students, 
and, as 1 explained what I would 
expect from them, I felt (hat he 


truly r-r irirfitf^tmiinn He 
stayed after class, and wc had a . 
long talk. I ipid him what 1 had 
heard tind asked if it was true. 
He agreed thiit it iva.s. 1 then (old 
him (hat we would work (ogelli- 
er, and dial I was positive that tic 
would nut only earn a good grade 
in my cl ass, but tha t I would 
—exp ccuKiin.iuTdo .u-ellTm. othetH 
classes as well. 

1 would like to tell you that 
from dial moment on he w.-is a 
-juipyrio r a>wi»(MT-hu(-t-cai>iki — 
Years of neglecting his classes 
look some lime to change. But 1 
ivill tell you that he-worked hard 
in my chiss and ended up with 
B’s, which he had rightfully 
earned. His grade.s also improved 
in his other cl.is.ses. 

We talked often, and I praised 
him often. My praise was sincere, 
and he knew it. Our meeting was 
definitive in both our lives. 
Becaii.se of liim 1 worked h^der 
with all of my students, and 
because of me he graduated and 


went <m to college. 

All of us have the ability to 
influence for good or for ilL 

Tcaclicrs, in particular, can 
-influence students, in may ways. 
If any of us, in any capacity, 
work with others, parttctUarly 
children, let us try to make a dif- 
_ferenc^t()_help_thoi«.who,need_ 
— a definitivo nsoment to.improve- 
their lives. 

Think back on your own deflni- 
tive moments - was someone 

to make that moment a good one, 
or do you look back with sadness 
or embarrassment upon it? 

We must help those in ouf care 
to Iiave good definitive moments 
moments which will help them 
Ip reach forward not backward. 
Their definitive moments can 
become our own. 

Gay Petersen is a retired sehocl- 
teqeher tvbo Hues in Wendell. 
IVrite ro her at pefersen^mogt- 
dinkuxtm . 1 


Q. Js a statement from your 
doctor saying yon are disabled 
enongh to qoa^ you for Sodal 


Social Security Q & A 


A. No. Let me explain. The A. The amount of benefits your 
~Disabilirr — ~~Deteiuiin.trion .rhilrircnxecciveJs.not-affected—. 

~SovKbsofltretn)-Dur~^ierat^ -by jOur carnlngsr~ 
ers your medical records, asks Th«‘*‘ payments will continuo 
your doctots for ^jcdfic medical- until they reach age 18 (age 19 if 
infotTMfiMi atwi may a tfaey ’r C still in high school) or 

-special examination lor you. nnnlTheyTnarTyr“ 

Then a team consisting of a pfaysi- recmve'bencfits a 

(or psychologist) and a dis- uig for a child under age 16 

ability evaluation will disabled, your benefits may be 

consida-alltbefoctsmyourcase affected by your earnings, 
and decide if you are disabled Call Social Security at 1-800- 
according to Social Security’s 772-1213 if you need more infor- 

rules. madon; 

Q. 1 ga bock Id week witb- 

eat aflectiag my dnldrcB’s pay- - ’ This column tvas prepared by the - 

menu fram Sociat Seesrity? • SeddI Security Administration. For 
They’ve been getting monthly fast answers to speeifie Social 
' checks on their retired hither’s Security questions,' contact Social 
eamiags (camL Security toll.free at 800-772-I2I3.) 


Warning to teen still packs punch 


DEAR ABBY: I am writing Ki 
request a piece you primed some 
time ago. It was culled "Please God, 
I’m Only 17." Mv nephew, 17. was 
— JusTklllcd to UTCarJcciJeni.-VVouni 
you please run it again? Thank you, 

— Abby; — 

- KATHY KNUTTER, 
.. y"'." I NDEPEMPENCE, M0.~" 

DEAR KATHY: That piece is one 

of die most powerful I have ever nm 
;.fn tny column, and it’s 'one of my 
, ,-most frequently requested. YoUng 
people confirm that it has made — 
(hem think twice about their driving 
habits and encouraged them to be 
. careful. You ore right; it should run 
again. Read on: 

PltSse'Goa.TmarilyT? = 

The day I died was an ordinary 
school day. How I wish I had taken 
- the bus. But I was too cool for the 
bus. I remember how I wheedled the - 
car out of-Mom. “Special favor," I 
pleaded. “All the kids drive.” 

When the 2:50 bell rang, I threw 
' all my books in die locker. 1 was free 
undl 8:40 tomorrow momingl I ran to 
the parking lot, excited at the 
• thought of driving a car and being 

■ my own boss: Free! - - 

It doesn’t matter how the accident 



-DE<\H-ABBt 

^AUgalVMiiai-- 


liappcncd. I W. 1 .S goofing off - going 
~too fa.«;Tnkmg crazy chances. But L. 
was enjoying my freedom and having 
fun. The last thing I remembet' wa.s 
— paiuiing an uld-lijdy who seemed to 
be going awfully slow. 1 heard the 
deafening crash and felt a terrible 
jolt. Glqu and steel flew everywhere, 
hfy whblc body seemed 10 be turning 
inside out. I heard myself scream. 

SuddeiiIyT"awaken\iI;‘'il'wjL‘rvety~ 
quiet. A police officer was standing - 
over me. Then' I saw a doctor. My 
body was mangled. I was saturated 
with blood. Pieces of jagged glass 
were sticking out all over. Strange, 
that I couldn’t feel anything. 

Hey, don’t pull that slicci over my . 
heddi I can’t be dead. Pm only 17. 
I’ve got a date toniglit I’m supposed 
,to grow up and have a wonderful life. 

I haven’t lived yet. f din’c be dcadl , 

Later I was placcd-in a drawer. My 
folks had to identify inc. Why did 


(hey tiave to see me like this? Why 
did I have to look at Mom’s eyes 
wlien she faced the most terrible 
_ .ordeal o f her l ife? Dad suddenly 
' Inokedltkc an old manl He told the 

- -man in ^arge.-iY^ he is my ! 

' The funeral was a weird experi- : 
_cncc. I saw all my relatives and 
• Inonds watte toward tht» ai<tlt«»t. Th>y' 
p.iswd by. one by one, an^ looked at 
me with the saddest eyes Tve ever 
—seen. Some oT-my buddies ware cry- 
ing. A few of the girls touched my 
hand and sobbe.d as they walked 
away. - 

Please - somebody — wake me up! 
Get me out of herd I can’t bear to 
see my mom and dad so broken up. 

, My ^ndporents ore so radeed with 
grief they can hardly walk. My broth- 
~cn and sistess arelikc iombies,Th^i— 
mgvdlike robots. In.a.daae. cvery- 
. body. No one can believe rh<« And 1 
can't believe it. either. 

Please don’t bury incl I’m not 
dead! I have a lot of living to do! 1 
want to laugh and run again. I want 
10 sing and dance. Please don’t put 
me in the ground. I promise if you 
give me one more chance. God, 
be the most careful driver in the 
whole world. AU I wont is one more 
clianccl 

Please, Go^ Pm only 171- ^ 


Aging population doesn’t 
boost nursing home niirnbers 


~TheWailibqr6«4i66<-~^~ 


Despite the country’s aging populatian, tlM 
. proportion of elderly Americans living, in 
nursi ng-homes nat tteclined ora Ttl ie past 
decade, according to a report based on 

' tudonol health surveys. ' 

WhiJ^a falling prevalence of disability is 
one possible factor, the report sdd, the shift 
to home-deUvered care and assisted living 
' “were Jikely more important In filling the' 
gap left by declining nurang-bome use.“ 
A^sted living ofiers independent bousing 
for older people, with aoces to care for dis- 

abilities. - ~ 

The latest statistics reflect “a rhan'g*- in 
thp-relg nf ihff nurenp hom^ ** |im,xeport ■ 

concluded. Nursing homes increasingly focus 

oh patients with severe disabflttiesatKl pa “a 

group of patients barely in 'eVideoce" in . 
1985: people receiving temporary; Medicare-' 
coveted care following surgery or ninp*. 

Tbe study, tepor^ in the current^£tioo 
of Health Afiaus, is based on the National 
Nursiiig Home Snrvey coodncted periodical- — 
ly by the National Center for Health 
Statistics. The latest data, from 1995, are 
compared a gatmt dua &unt 10 years earlier. ' 
The comparison shows “some unexpected 
shifts in the w^ dders are ustng the nursing 


“Borne,* Bfandefs 'OnivFierty-researcEer-- 
Christine E. Bishop reported. ' 

The proportion of Americans 65 and older 
who were stayin g in a nursing hom e on a ' 
grv en da y fell from 4.6 percenTmlg^S to4.2 
percent a decade later, with the 'dedihe most’’ 
striking in the so-called “oldest old," those 
over 85. . _ 

IT the 19^ rate for thb$e '6ver'65 had held 
up for the next decade, about a quarter-mil- 
~uon more elderiy people would have been in 
nursing homes in 1995 than 4te 1.4 million 
who actually w ere in these fai^des. Bishop 
es tima t e d. ' 

Those data also show that elderly African 
Americans have a higher rate of nursing* 
-bone use 4ban-white.JkmaiicanSr reversing — 
past diqtarides. " 

Medicare, home heal th.usel^'grew phenom- 

muUJy" after the eligibility criteria were 
broadoied in 1989, Bishop noted. By 1995, 
about 10 percent of all M^care beneflda- 
lies used home health care - double the rate 
a decade eariier. 

' And'fanitlliiM'pitdiea in. H is important," - 
Bishop noted, “to remember the crisis chat 
has not happened: Despite unfavorable 
demographic trends, infonhal^ unpaid siip^ 
port amtinues to care for older per- 
sons living at home." ^